海角大神

Rahm Emanuel to fellow Democrats: Admit mistakes, win on economic issues

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Caitlin Babcock/ 海角大神
Rahm Emanuel, the former mayor of Chicago and the former U.S. ambassador to Japan under President Joe Biden, speaks to reporters at a Monitor event in Washington, Jan. 21, 2026.

To Rahm Emanuel, a man who has had many roles in the Democratic Party 鈥 most recently, U.S. ambassador to Japan 鈥 the answer to winning the midterm elections sounds simple: 鈥淩estore access to the American dream.鈥

At a conversation with reporters on Wednesday hosted by 海角大神, Mr. Emanuel didn鈥檛 dwell much on threats to democracy, the topic that drove much of Democratic messaging in 2024. Instead, he circled the rising cost of groceries, health care, and housing.

鈥淭he moment the American dream becomes unaffordable and inaccessible is the same moment American democracy becomes unstable,鈥 Mr. Emanuel said.

Why We Wrote This

With an eye on his own possible presidential run, former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel tells a Monitor Breakfast that fellow Democrats need to show voters a viable path for addressing economic issues including affordable health care, education, and housing.

鈥淵ou want to stabilize democracy? Make sure that more Americans than just the few and select get access to it,鈥 Mr. Emanuel says, adding that, today, he sees the rich getting richer and the middle class struggling 鈥 and the government making no attempts to rebalance.

As November鈥檚 midterms draw nearer, independents are the fastest-growing group of voters, making up a near-majority. The discomfort those voters feel is one of three emotions regarding President Donald Trump that Mr. Emanuel sees in the electorate. The others are anger, among Democrats, and a sense of betrayal, felt by Republicans, including former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia.

President Trump promised to be 鈥淎merica first,鈥 yet lately has been focused on expanding U.S. territory and securing a Nobel Peace Prize, says Mr. Emanuel. 鈥淲hat Democrats shouldn鈥檛 do is walk around saying, 鈥業 told you so.鈥欌

Instead, Democrats need to show a path for change, he says, and admit what they got wrong during their time in power. Democrats need to also earn the support of the unaffiliated voters who make up some 45 percent of the electorate 鈥 something they can work to solidify between this year鈥檚 midterms and the 2028 presidential election.

鈥淵es, they have turned against Trump and the Republicans, but they haven鈥檛 turned towards you,鈥 Mr. Emanuel says to his party.

The elections this fall will follow a pattern, he says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a law of physics when one party controls the microphone and the gavel,鈥 Mr. Emanuel says, insisting the midterms will be a referendum election and that Democrats, as the party out of power, will likely see heavy turnout.

To win, Democrats should be wherever Mr. Trump isn鈥檛, he says. 鈥淗e can talk about Greenland; we鈥檙e going to talk about groceries. You want to talk about Venezuela? We want to talk about the families that are struggling in Virginia.鈥

Mr. Emanuel is no stranger to running for office. After serving as a senior adviser to President Bill Clinton, he was a member of Congress before returning to the White House as President Barack Obama鈥檚 chief of staff. Next, during eight years as mayor of Chicago, he pushed through education reforms 鈥 raising graduation rates, but also drawing ire from the teachers鈥 union. Under President Joe Biden, Mr. Emanuel served as ambassador to Japan.

Lately, Mr. Emanuel spends his time crisscrossing the country and making stops in small communities 鈥 recently in Mississippi and soon in Michigan. He speaks mainly about education and affordability as he appears to be exploring a 2028 presidential run.

At Wednesday鈥檚 event, part of the long-running Monitor Breakfast gatherings of newsmakers with reporters, he outlined a series of reforms he proposes for Washington, which he says needs to be 鈥渃leaned up.鈥 Those include a crackdown on corruption in all branches of government, from receiving gifts to stock trading to family members鈥 profiting. And he called for mandatory retirement at 75 for people serving in the executive, judicial, and legislative branches, saying he would do so by enacting legislation.

Mr. Emanuel, who is 66, says he would not exempt himself from the age limit should he run for president and be elected. If so, he would be a one-term president. Currently, he says, Washington 鈥渓ooks like a bad version of the Politburo, how old everyone is.鈥

Globally, Mr. Emanuel says America鈥檚 influence is waning, weakened by the leadership of Mr. Trump, who he says 鈥減unches down and kisses up.鈥 While he agrees with Mr. Trump that the United States has long neglected its own backyard in favor of Europe and the Indo-Pacific, he opposes the president鈥檚 aggressive foreign policy in Latin America and warns of the consequences of pushing Canada and U.S. allies in the Pacific toward China.

As the ambassador to Japan, Mr. Emanuel participated in a 2023 trilateral summit at Camp David between the U.S., South Korea, and Japan, something he says was 鈥渢he worst day in China鈥檚 life.鈥 Just recently, South Korea and Japan held a bilateral meeting without the U.S. 鈥淭hat was a good day for China,鈥 says Mr. Emanuel.

Convincing Japan and the Philippines that they can feel secure about partnership with the U.S. is the first step to making sure America is a permanent power and presence in the Pacific, but that standing is 鈥渦nder attack鈥 by the Trump administration, he says.

Still, 鈥渘othing about China today scares me. What we are not doing at home scares me,鈥 says Mr. Emanuel. 鈥淲e鈥檙e in a race for the future. We鈥檙e not going to do it [with] the worst reading and math skills ever.鈥

The solution? Education, which he describes as a pathway to achieving the American dream and making the nation competitive internationally.

鈥淓ducation is core to the Democratic Party,鈥 Mr. Emanuel says. 鈥淭he party鈥檚 lost its edge. We鈥檙e known more for opening bathroom doors and closing school doors than anything else.鈥 His quip was a nod to the party鈥檚 political difficulties on transgender policies and pandemic school closures.

All in all, Mr. Emanuel is optimistic for Democrats鈥 chances going forward. 鈥淚鈥檇 rather have our hand than their hand.鈥

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