Tim Armstrong — whose tech career included chief roles at Google, AOL, and Verizon — told CNBC Thursday he thinks of Howard Schultz as a mentor and would support the former Starbucks CEO, if he were to run for president as a centrist independent in 2020.
"Howard Schultz has been one of my mentors. He's spent a lot of time with me. I really have a tremendous amount of respect for what he's done at Starbucks," said Armstrong, one of Google's longest-serving executives before leaving for AOL. "Howard is somebody who's done a lot for this country and a lot for the economy."
Late last month, the billionaire Schultz told CBS' "60 Minutes" that he's considering running for president "outside of the two-party system."
In 2011, Armstrong, as CEO of AOL, was one of the first chief executives to sign onto a Schultz initiative urging corporate titans to stop contributing to political campaigns until lawmakers in Washington pass a bipartisan spending package to control the nation's increasing debt.
Armstrong said he'd also be open to supporting Mike Bloomberg, former New York City mayor and billionaire businessman, if he were to run for the White House against President Donald Trump.
Bloomberg, now a registered Democrat, also flirted with running as an independent in the past. But like many other Democrats, he warned Schultz a third-party candidate would split the anti-Trump vote and give the president a second term.
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