Former Vice President Joe Biden said the news media will eventually expose Michael Bloomberg’s controversial policy views and that will lead to diminished support for the former New York mayor among black voters.

The Democratic presidential candidate said Bloomberg’s $60 billion fortune can buy a “lot of advertising but it can’t erase your record.”

“There’s a lot to talk about with Michael Bloomberg,” Biden said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” in an interview that aired Sunday.

“You all are going to start focusing on him like you have on me, which I’m not complaining, like you have on me the last six months. You’re going to focus on him. His position on issues relating to the African-American community, from stop-and-frisk to the way he talked about [former President] Obama,” he continued.

Biden’s comments come after he finished fourth in the Iowa caucuses and fifth in the New Hampshire primary and as Bloomberg’s support among African-Americans has risen to 22 percent, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released last week.

Biden, who leads all Democratic hopefuls with 27 percent support among African-Americans, also criticized Bloomberg for running campaign ads that highlight his relationship with Obama – even though the billionaire didn’t endorse him in 2008.

“All of a sudden he’s his best buddy. You know, I mean — and he would not endorse him,” Biden said.

“You take a look at the stop-and-frisk proposals. You take a look at his ideas on redlining he’s talking about. You take a look at what he’s done relative to the African-American community. I’m anxious to debate Michael on the issues relating to, you know, what we’re going to face in Super Tuesday,” he continued.

Bloomberg has apologized for using stop and frisk during his time as New York mayor and has clarified his previous remarks about redlining – a housing practice that denied mortgages and other financial services to minorities in designated low-income communities.

The former mayor, who has already spent more than $300 million on campaign ads on radio, television and online, decided not to compete in the first four primary states to concentrate on the delegate-rich 14 states that go to the polls March 3 on Super Tuesday.