Ex-Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz wants to compete with the U.S. presidential election of 2020, possibly as an independent candidate against President Donald Trump. “I’m very seriously considering to run for President,” said the 65-year-old billionaire on Sunday evening in the TV channel CBS. Schultz, who was claims to be “life-long” Democrat, announced that as an “independent centre candidate outside the Two-party-system” to compete.

Schultz said in the CBS program “60 Minutes,” Trump for President “not qualified”. In addition, neither Trumps the Republicans nor the opposition Democrats took care of it, “what is in the best interest of the American people needed”. The two major parties are engaged instead, “day by day” with “revenge politics”.

“I want to see America win,”

Schultz made both parties for the high level of sovereign debt in the USA is responsible, and spoke in this connection of a “fail in their constitutional responsibility”. The fear that he might take away the Democrats crucial votes and to give Trump a second term in office, rejected Schultz: “I want to see the American people win, I want to see America win.”

One of the candidates for the presidential nomination of the Democrats, the former housing Minister Julián Castro said in the CNN, when Schultz go as an independent in the race, would Trump “biggest hopes” in a re-election.

daily mirror tomorrow location

Free

order from US presidential elections have, in fact, only the candidates of the Democrats and Republicans a Chance. Independent candidates have always achieved success again in warning, then walked to the detriment of one of the two major parties.

So the Democrats accuse the US consumer lawyer Ralph Nader, Al Gore in the year 2000 in the fight against George W. Bush for important votes. From the point of view of the Republicans, Bill Clinton’s victory against George H. W. Bush in 1992, partly on the account of businessman Ross Perot.

More about

the end of the shutdown, The Dealmaker, Trump beat is

Juliane Schäuble

The New York-bred Schultz expanded Starbucks from a small coffee shop in Seattle to a global group. In June of 2018, he had announced his retirement as chief of the coffee-house chain, and, therefore, speculation about a possible presidential candidacy stoked. (AFP)