Environmentalist Tom Steyer ends 2020 Democratic presidential bid
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3-4 minutesBillionaire
environmentalist Tom Steyer, a fierce critic of President Donald Trump
who had pushed early for his impeachment, abandoned his bid for the 2020
Democratic presidential nomination on Saturday after trailing in third
place in the South Carolina primary, a campaign source told Reuters.
Democratic
Presidential candidate entrepreneur Tom Steyer reacts as he speaks to
supporters as he announced that he is suspending his campaign at his
election night party on the day of the South Carolina primary in
Columbia, South Carolina, U.S., February 29, 2020. REUTERS/Mark Makela
Steyer,
who poured hundreds of millions of dollars of his own money into his
quest, dropped out of the race on the day of his strongest showing yet
in a 2020 Democratic nominating contest. Even so, he finished far behind
winner Joe Biden and second-place finisher Bernie Sanders.
“Honestly, I can’t see a path where I can win the presidency,” Steyer told supporters in South Carolina.
“I
love you very much, this has been a great experience, I have zero
regrets. Meeting you and the people of America has been a highlight of
my life.”
The 62-year-old former hedge fund manager from San
Francisco portrayed himself as a political outsider and blasted
corporate money in U.S. politics in July, when he joined a field of two
dozen Democrats seeking to deny Trump, a Republican, a second term.
He
poured $64.7 million of his own wealth in January into his bid for the
Democratic nomination, bringing his total campaign spending to $267
million.
Like fellow billionaire Michael Bloomberg, Steyer drew
criticism from other Democrats as trying to buy his way to the
nomination. Spending tens of millions of dollars, however, did not win
the level of support from voters needed.
Steyer said he would support the eventual Democratic nominee.
Steyer
amassed a fortune, estimated by Forbes magazine at $1.6 billion, after
founding investment firm Farallon Capital Management in the mid-1980s
and serving as a partner at San Francisco private equity firm Hellman
& Friedman.
In January 2019, he had said he was passing on a
2020 run to focus on efforts to impeach Trump and get Democrats elected
to the U.S. Congress.
Steyer has been a force in Democratic
fundraising over the past decade. During the 2018 election cycle, he was
the second-largest donor to Democratic and liberal candidates and
causes, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
He has
worked for years on climate change and voter engagement and donated
about $170 million since 2015 to his independent political action
committees, Need to Impeach and NextGen America.
Steyer billed
himself as the only candidate who would make climate change his No. 1
priority as president. “It is a state of emergency and I would declare a
state of emergency on Day One,” he said during a November debate.
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