Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban debates Fox News’ Sean Hannity about Obamacare and President Trump’s commercial and economic decisions.
Mark Cuban, the billionaire owner of the Dallas Mavericks, did not exactly rule out a possible presidential run in 2024, but said he was not the right man for the job right now.
Cuban told Brandon “Scoop B” Robinson in his podcast Wednesday that would depend if he thought he was the “right person” for the job.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXBUSINESS.COM
“Based on everything I know now, no. But, as you said, whether things go south depends on how south they go and how far south and whether or not I thought I would be the right person. I wouldn’t do that just to do this. I would only do that if I thought I was the right person. We have time, so there are a lot of other qualified people out there too, ”Cuban told Robinson.
BILLIONAIRE RYAN SMITH RECEIVES APPROVAL TO BUY UTAH JAZZ: WHO IS THE NEW OWNER OF THE NBA TEAM?
Cuban has flirted with the presidential candidacy in the last two election cycles. He said in May 2016 that he would “absolutely” consider Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton running mate and at the time did not rule out a race for 2020 or 2024. Ultimately, he supported Clinton in 2016 and President Biden in 2020 .
Cuban told WFAA-TV in May that his family voted against him because of the stress of the campaign. He repeated that notion earlier this month on David Axelrod’s podcast. He added that a researcher told him that he “dominated the independent vote, but in total, I only managed up to 25%”.
He told Sean Hannity of Fox News in June that he would support Biden in the presidential race and that the former vice president “wants to rule a country”.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPLICATION
Cuban also served on Trump’s economic council in April to help start businesses amid the coronavirus pandemic.