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Bloomberg Fills Potholes, Has No Second Thoughts About Term Limits


Michael Bloomberg Michael Rubens Bloomberg (born 14 February 1942) is an American businessman, and the founder of Bloomberg L.P., currently serving as the Mayor of New York City. He was a general partner at Salomon Brothers before founding the financial software service company in 1981. , fresh off his one-day trip to Israel, was in Sheepshead Bay Sheepshead Bay, residential area in S Brooklyn borough of New York City, SE N.Y., on Sheepshead Bay. It was once famous for its horse and automobile races and as a resort center. The bay is an anchorage for commercial and pleasure fishing craft.  Brooklyn this morning filling in a pothole pothole, in geology, cylindrical pit formed in the rocky channel of a turbulent stream. It is formed and enlarged by the abrading action of pebbles and cobbles that are carried by eddies, or circular water currents that move against the main current of a stream. .

After one reporter at the event asked aloud if this meant the mayor's reelection re·e·lect also re-e·lect  
tr.v. re·e·lect·ed, re·e·lect·ing, re·e·lects
To elect again.



re
 campaign was officially underway, Bloomberg replied, sportingly, that the mayor’s job is “filling potholes and waving the flag.”

He said it’s “too early” for a mayoral campaign, but added, “I think it’s fair to say you know what we’ve been doing. You’ve had seven years to look and see whether or not we’ve been doing a good job and we’ll certainly have a campaign.”

Later, he was asked about the term-limits lawsuit lawsuit: see procedure; tort.  – which will begin with opening arguments this afternoon – and whether he had any “second thoughts” or regrets about extending the term-limits law.

“I certainly haven’t thought about it and I have no regrets,” Bloomberg said. He went on to say he still thinks term limits serve a purpose, but that three terms are better than two “given just the realities of how long it takes to get certain things done.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Observer
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Article Details
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Author:Azi Paybarah
Publication:The New York Observer
Date:Jan 5, 2009
Words:178
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