But if you think his views on Israeli or Saudi Arabia are bad, check out his position on China. Bloomberg has spent years lauding Chinese efforts against climate change — which have been far from successful — while preventing journalists at Bloomberg News from publishing pieces critical of the regime in Beijing.
On the former mayor’s Twitter feed, you will find plenty of tweets praising Chinese officials and business leaders but zero mentions of the Hong Kong protesters or the Uighur Muslims. (Biden, to be fair to him, has said the “internment of nearly 1 million Uighur Muslims is among the worst abuses of human rights in the world today.”)
In an interview with PBS in September, Bloomberg made what should be considered a disqualifying statement on the subject of China. “The Communist Party wants to stay in power in China and they listen to the public,” Bloomberg told interviewer Margaret Hoover. “Xi Jinping is not a dictator. He has to satisfy his constituents or he’s not going to survive.”
Got that? The unelected president for life of communist China is “not a dictator,” says the person who wants to be the next Democratic president of the United States.
It isn’t just domestically, therefore, that a Bloomberg presidency would be a regressive disaster; on foreign policy, it is clear even from his limited record that he would undermine, rather than advance, the cause of democracy and human rights, and peace in the Middle East.
There is already a right-wing billionaire in the White House who lacks foreign policy experience; supported the Iraq War debacle; and considers the prime minister of Israel, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, and the president of China to be among his closest friends and allies.
Do we really need another one?