KEY POINTS
  • Billionaire candidate Mike Bloomberg's presidential campaign may not be taking money from some of the most influential Democratic donors on Wall Street, but he is working hard to convince them he can win.
  • Bloomberg and his team made their pitch Dec. 19 to at least 90 attendees at a breakfast at his campaign headquarters in New York, according to people who attended.
  • Many of the attendees left feeling impressed with the presentation. They departed believing that Bloomberg wanted them to spread the word to their allies in the business community about his campaign's operation.
2020 Democratic presidential hopeful and former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg speaks during an event to open a campaign office at Eastern Market in Detroit, Michigan, on December 21, 2019.

Billionaire candidate Mike Bloomberg's presidential campaign may not be taking money from some of the most influential Democratic donors on Wall Street, but he is working hard to convince them he has a path to win the nomination.

Bloomberg and his team made their pitch Dec. 19 to at least 90 attendees, including many New York business executives, at a breakfast at his campaign headquarters in New York, according to people who attended. These people spoke on the condition of anonymity due the conversations being deemed private.