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Bloomberg’s Democratic Nomination Odds Continue to Improve Ahead of His First Debate

Robert Duff

By Robert Duff in Politics News

Updated: April 10, 2020 at 9:56 am EDT

Published:


Michael Bloomberg closeup
As he readies to participate in his first Democratic Presidential debate, Michael Bloomberg's odds to win the nomination are steadily improving. He's gone from from +253 to +213 over the last week. Photo by katie chao and ben muessig (flickr).
  • The odds of Michael Bloomberg winning the Democratic nomination have gone from from +253 to +213 over the last week
  • How might his first appearance in a Democratic Presidential debate on Wednesday impact those odds?
  • The latest betting futures for all the remaining Democratic contenders are listed below

Regarding Michael Bloomberg and the 2020 Democratic Presidential nomination, the billionaire businessman and former New York mayor is hot. He’s riding a wave of popularity since entering the race last November. But now, it’s time to go to work.

Bloomberg will be confronted with his first face-to-face opposition during Wednesday’s Democratic Presidential debate in Nevada.

To date, he’s been able to steadily rise among the contenders without even participating in a primary. Across the leading sportsbooks, Bloomberg saw another positive shift come his way in the Democratic nomination odds. He improved from +253 to +213 in the past week.

2020 Democratic Nomination Odds

Candidate Odds
Bernie Sanders +125
Michael Bloomberg +200
Joe Biden +775
Pete Buttigieg +800
Amy Klobuchar +2000
Hillary Clinton +2000
Elizabeth Warren +6600
Michelle Obama +8000
Tom Steyer +15000
Deval Patrick +15000
Tulsi Gabbard +20000
Andrew Cuomo +25000
Robby Wells +25000
Stacey Abrams +25000
John Delaney +30000

Odds taken Feb. 19.

Sportsbooks list Bloomberg as their second favorite at +200.

Game On For Bloomberg

Every team breaks training camp thinking they’ve assembled a winning squad. Then the games begin, and reality sets in.

For Bloomberg, practice is over. He’s been able to gain a foothold in this race thanks, mostly, to a massively expensive advertising campaign aimed directly at US President Donald Trump.

For the first time during Wednesday’s debates, Bloomberg will face the grilling of his Democratic opponents. And there’s plenty of ammunition they can aim his way.

There’s his stop-and-frisk policy as mayor of New York. Accusations of racism and sexual harassment have also been made against Bloomberg. And let’s not forget that when he was mayor, Bloomberg ran as a Republican.

The hashtag #AskBloomberg was trending Wednesday on Twitter. Democratic Presidential candidates Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders and President Trump were attacking Bloomberg’s record via social media.

How he’s able to parry their attacks could significantly impact Bloomberg’s betting line positively or negatively.

Can Money Buy The Nomination?

They say that money can’t buy happiness. But cold, hard cash has been buying elections for years.

Is that Bloomberg’s gameplan? The Wall Street Journal reports that the Bloomberg campaign intends to buy positive reinforcement from within.

https://twitter.com/jelani9/status/1228861884180373504?s=20

Hundreds of Bloomberg staffers can earn up to $2,500 a month; all they need do is post positive messages about him on their personal social media accounts.

Sanders and Elizabeth Warren have already accused the billionaire of trying to buy the nomination.

Is Bloomberg Doing More Harm Than Good?

In horse racing, top trainers with deep stables will put a speed horse in as an entry. The goal is to set a fast pace that will wear down the favorite. Fast frontrunners with no staying power, known as rabbits, are often utilized in distance races in track and field to create a similar impact.

What’s Bloomberg’s ultimate role here? Is his goal merely to do as much damage to Trump as he can and then step aside? Is he truly seeking the nomination?

https://twitter.com/nkjemisin/status/1230278333172244482?s=20

His late entry to the race and the fact that he won’t be officially on the ballot until Super Tuesday give off that impression. But what Bloomberg might actually be hampering the chances of other moderates like Biden, Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar.

Bloomberg’s disruption could end up giving Trump what he so wants. That’s a showdown for the Presidency against Sanders and his socialist policies.


This article may contain links to external sports betting services. SBD may receive advertising revenue from these links, however editorial has hand-picked each individual link based on relevance to the article, without influence on the coverage.

Robert Duff
Robert Duff

Sports Writer

An industry veteran, Bob literally taught the course on the history of sports at Elder College. He has worked as a Sports Columnist for Postmedia, appeared as a guest on several radio stations, was the Vice President of the Society For International Hockey Research in Ontario, and written 25 books.

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