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Updated: New book, quoting former schools chief (who denies it), claims Bloomberg was planning in 2006 (not 2008) for third term

Wouldja believe Mayor Mike Bloomberg was thinking of a third term (and the need to overturn term limits) by November 2006--not, as he publicly announced 10/2/08, because of the economic crisis?

Well, author Steven Brill drops that bomb in his new book Class Warfare, published in August--though his source, former schools Chancellor Joel Klein, denied it in an 8/20/11 book review in the Wall Street Journal:
In addition, Mr. Brill quotes me saying that the reason we didn't get major reforms in the late-2006 teachers-union contract was because of the mayor's decision "to run for a third term." But so far as I know, the mayor didn't even contemplate running for a third term until 2008
Picking up the news

As far as I can tell, Gotham Schools found the news first, in an 8/31/11 roundup article, without noticing the Klein review.

In a review essay headlined School ā€˜Reformā€™: A Failing Grade, in the 9/29/11 New York Review of Books, Diane Ravitch wrote:
Brill does have one piece of news. He writes that Bloomberg started planning to overturn mayoral term limits and run for a third term as early as 2006, not in 2009ā€”as he publicly claimed at the timeā€”in response to the economic crisis of 2008. Because Bloomberg secretly intended to run again, Brill claims, he tied Joel Kleinā€™s hands in negotiating with the teachersā€™ union and dramatically expanded the cityā€™s pension liabilities while getting insignificant concessions from the union in return.
From the book

Here are two excerpts:

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