Former Chicago Mayor and Clinton political machine hatchetman Rahm Emanuel appears to be gearing up for a 2028 presidential run while hitting the media and speaking circuit with the message that Democrats must pivot back to the political middle. Fresh off a stint as former President Joe Biden’s ambassador to Japan, Emanuel has increased his public profile through public speaking engagements as well as corporate media and podcast appearances, arguing his party has become too focused on niche cultural and social issues like transgenderism.
During a recent appearance on the Bill Maher Show, Emanuel—who infamously threw steak knives into a table while listing off Democrat donors he believed had abandoned Bill Clinton and shouting “DEAD” while speaking at a fundraiser during the 1992 presidential election—took the more progressive audience to task for catering to far-left, fringe issues. “In seventh grade, if I had known I could’ve said the word ‘they’ and gotten in the girls’ bathroom, I would’ve done it,” Emanuel said, arguing: “We literally are a superpower, we’re facing off against China with 1.4 billion people and two-thirds of our children can’t read eighth-grade level.”
The education issue appears to be the kernel on which an Emanuel campaign would form. The former Chicago Mayor also hammered the education issue while speaking before the major Democratic lawfare group, Democracy Forward, in February. “I am done with the discussion of locker rooms, I am done with the discussion of bathrooms, and we better start having a conversation about the classroom,” he said.
CLINTONISM RETURNS?
Notably, Emanuel is also chastising Democrats for letting their corporate media allies dictate the political conversation, blasting party leaders for being overly focused on President Donald J. Trump‘s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and cuts to federal agencies. “The New York Times put crumbs all the way to the front door of the USAID headquarters and we just walked along back there,” Emanuel told donors and party elites gathered at Democracy Foward’s event.
While most early names for the 2028 Democratic nomination still appear stuck trying to define themselves against President Donald J. Trump’s popular America First agenda, Emanuel may just find a niche playing in the exceedingly difficult lane of ‘political moderate.’ Whether that will play with the Democratic Party’s increasingly far-left and radical base remains to be seen.