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Michael Bloomberg says he won’t release women from nondisclosure agreements

Michael Bloomberg waits by his tour bus in Austin, Texas, this month.
Democratic presidential candidate Michael R. Bloomberg waits by his tour bus in Austin, Texas, this month.
(AFP via Getty Images)
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Democratic presidential candidate Michael R. Bloomberg said Wednesday he wouldn’t release women from confidentiality agreements they’d signed relating to allegations of a hostile work environment at his company.

“We don’t have anything to hide, but we made legal agreements which both sides wanted to keep certain things from coming out,” Bloomberg said on ABC’s “The View.”

Bloomberg, a former New York City mayor, runs a financial data and media company bearing his name. ABC News reported last year on several lawsuits accusing Bloomberg of making crude comments in the 1990s and creating an uncomfortable work environment for women. He has denied the allegations.

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But Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, his Democratic primary rival, has called on Bloomberg to release the women from nondisclosure agreements that control what they can say about the incidents.

Bloomberg said Wednesday the company had signed “very few” such agreements and that “most women” in the company would say it’s a great place to work, with equal pay and equal opportunity for promotions.

“Did I ever tell a bawdy joke? Yeah, sure I did,” he said. “Do I regret it? Yes, it’s embarrassing.”

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Bloomberg then speculated that “an awful lot of the women” would not want to disclose details of the confidentiality agreements. Bloomberg’s company employs roughly 20,000 people.

The billionaire businessman’s appearance on “The View” came a day after six of his Democratic rivals debated in Iowa. Bloomberg cannot quality for the debates because he is not accepting campaign contributions. He also appeared Tuesday night on “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.”

Later Wednesday, the campaign is hosting a “Women for Bloomberg” event in New York.

Bloomberg, 77, is running an unconventional primary campaign. He is skipping the first four early-voting states to focus on the 14 states that vote on March 3, known as Super Tuesday. He told Colbert he’d spent “a couple hundred million dollars” on his campaign so far.

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