A pollster for former Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the Democratic presidential candidate’s campaign will focus on climate change, gun violence, income inequality and education.

“Guns, certainly,” Doug Schoen told host John Catsimatidis on “The Cats Roundtable” on AM 970 New York in an interview that aired Sunday. “He has had great success passing anti-gun violence legislation in the state legislatures.”

Schoen also said the billionaire media mogul will concentrate on education.

“He was a leader in New York and he’s helped run a medical school and run Johns Hopkins, provided enormous amounts of scholarship aid there,” Schoen said.

Another focal point will be climate change, he said, “given his role as the Special Representative of the [UN] Secretary General on Climate.”

“Ultimately he needs to tell the story of how he’s created thousands of jobs, and what we need to do as a country to reduce income inequality,” Schoen said. “Because while we have very high employment, the gap between the rich and the poor has gotten greater. And I think people really require opportunities that close that gap.”

Addressing Bloomberg’s campaign strategy, Schoen said the three-term mayor will highlight his accomplishments while running the country’s biggest city.

“[Bloomberg] anticipates both doing voter registration and also running a separate track of anti-Trump ads,” he said. “Americans should expect to see ads touting Mike Bloomberg and also attacking Donald Trump.”

Asked about running against Trump when the economy and the stock market are hitting record highs, Schoen said Bloomberg will carve out a niche for himself among the candidates.

“There’s a lot more to do with having a job creator, a centrist, somebody who brings people together like Bloomberg with a unique record of accomplishment,” he said. “I think that makes him a distinct and arguably bold candidate for the presidency.”

Bloomberg, 77, threw his hat in the ring last week, joining the crowded Democratic field just months before the first caucuses in Iowa.

But Bloomberg, who’s worth is estimated to be more than $50 billion, will bypass the early contests in the Hawkeye State and New Hampshire to concentrate on the Super Tuesday elections on March 3.

He has vowed to spend as much as $150 million of his own fortune on the race.