
Rahm Emanuel confronts 'awkward' prospect of facing a home-state rival in the 2028 presidential race
CHICAGO — Rahm Emanuel admits the potential of taking on JB Pritzker in a 2028 presidential run is 'going to be awkward.'
Over decades in public life, Emanuel has had stints as White House chief of staff, congressman, cutthroat Democratic operative, overseas diplomat and more.
But around here, it's a little more simple. Emanuel was a two-term Chicago mayor. Pritzker is a two-term Illinois governor. If the two end up as part of the 2028 Democratic presidential field, the longtime allies will inevitably bump up against each other — and like most political fights, it could get ugly.
'Look, JB and I are friends,' Emanuel said in an interview. The two recently had dinner, he noted. They text. When Emanuel came into town in his capacity as U.S. ambassador to Japan, they made a point of getting breakfast. 'We're going to continue to be friends, but if we're running for the same position, it will be awkward.'
(Asked to expound on what would make it awkward, the famously unguarded Emanuel said, 'It's so f-----g — it's self-evident, Jesus Christ.')
When Pritzker was a private citizen and Emanuel served as mayor, the two collaborated on bringing tech incubator 1871 to the city. While serving in Japan, Emanuel worked with Pritzker on bringing quantum computing to the University of Chicago, he said.
The sun set on Emanuel's mayoralty in 2019, after the controversial handling of the fatal police shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. At one point, some had even written Emanuel's political obituary.
Pritzker, a billionaire, emerged as governor in the meantime and positioned himself as a fighter in the Trump resistance, with a penchant for grabbing headlines — and making investments in battleground states — that looked like it was leading to an inevitable White House run. Locally, Pritzker wrested control of the state party and has built a formidable organizing operation.
Now though, Emanuel is back stateside and back in politics, running through the national podcast circuit. Some observers are pointing to his prickly exterior and unvarnished criticisms of his own party as perhaps a good fit for the moment.
His open exploration of a presidential run allowed him to leap in front of Pritzker, who is ensconced in a daily waiting game, neither saying he's running for a third term as governor (though he's expected to do so soon) nor admitting aspirations to enter the 2028 presidential fray (though he has made notable visits to some states that voted early in the last primary).
Emanuel, 65, noted any 2028 presidential race is bound to be crowded, and he said he would set himself apart by leaning on accumulated experience through the wide-ranging roles he's held over the years. That spans from heading party-line brawls on Capitol Hill to working in two White Houses (Barack Obama's and Bill Clinton's) to his private-sector stint as an investment banker. It's among the attributes he believes could underpin an argument to be the nation's chief executive.
Emanuel points to two overarching qualities that he said would set him apart. The first, he said, is having taken on a host of industries over the years to forge new laws or to pressure them into reform. He ticked off going after insurance companies, helping impose regulations around banking, suing pharmaceutical companies over opiates and clashing with the NRA to get an assault weapons ban.
The second is having experience in every corridor of power inside and outside of government, while also having up-close brushes with public tragedy and grief that come with the job of being mayor.
'You have to be comfortable in the boardroom, and you have to be comfortable in the Situation Room, and sometimes you have to be really comfortable in the emergency room. And I think I know all those spaces,' Emanuel said of being president. 'JB is a friend, as is [Pennsylvania Gov.] Josh Shapiro, as is [California] Gov. [Gavin] Newsom. … And so they'll offer what they have, and I'll offer what I have.'
'I think I know something, from the Situation Room to the emergency room to the classroom to the boardroom to the family room,' he continued. 'The problem for Democrats over the last four years is they got comfortable only in the bathroom and the locker room.'
Emanuel, in his spree of media interviews this year, often complained that Democrats focused too heavily on issues like gender and bathroom access and not enough on improving education and the bottom line for middle-class families.
That's a natural dividing line between him and Pritzker, who has unapologetically embraced getting into those kinds of political - cultural battles.
'Voters didn't turn out for Democrats last November not because they don't want us to fight for our values, but because they think we don't want to fight for our values,' Pritzker said in April at a Democratic Party dinner in New Hampshire.
If Emanuel has an interest in his own run for governor — as Pritzker stated in a CNN interview in May — he doesn't publicly entertain it.
'My assumption is he's running for governor. … I'd be surprised if he doesn't,' Emanuel said.
He added: 'We have a great state. We have big challenges, and they can't be ignored.'
That leads back to the 'awkward' part. If Pritzker formally launches into a third gubernatorial campaign — as some political observers, Emanuel included, believe he will — Pritzker will be stuck in a way that Emanuel isn't.
Pritzker can hardly publicly indulge presidential ambitions as he's facing daily budget worries or battling the Trump White House on deportations.
By the November 2026 gubernatorial election, Emanuel and other Democratic presidential hopefuls may be leaps and bounds ahead of Pritzker on the national campaign trail.
'You give Rahm Emanuel a year and five months' head start and you think you're going to push him out? That's cuckoo,' said a Democratic strategist who has worked on multiple presidential campaigns and asked for anonymity to speak bluntly. 'It tells me he doesn't know Rahm and maybe he doesn't know himself.'
A second Democratic strategist countered, 'Pritzker is always going to win that fight because he's a Pritzker.'
A Pritzker ally, meanwhile, argued that it was Emanuel who could face his own hurdles, including having moved too far from the left, inviting struggle in a Democratic primary.
Short of bowing out from seeking a third term, Pritzker could confront political circumstances similar to those of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who first sought re-election as governor and then, shortly after the first legislative session following that victory, launched a 2024 GOP presidential primary campaign. DeSantis dropped out of the presidential race after a stinging defeat in Iowa.
As Pritzker contends with those dynamics, Emanuel is moving forward exploring his message.
'If I decide to run, and if I was fortunate enough to serve, the only interest group I would focus on is the middle class and their American dream, and their children's shot at it,' Emanuel said. 'That is No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3 focus.'

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NBC News
5 hours ago
- NBC News
A cast of scandal-plagued candidates tests the limits of what New York City voters will forgive
Few political operatives have it easier than opposition researchers in New York City this year. New York's 2025 municipal races feature a scandal-laden cast of characters whose alleged or proven misdeeds have made front-page headlines for years. They include the front-runner heading into Tuesday's Democratic mayoral primary. Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has spent much of his bid to become New York's next mayor cleaning skeletons out of his closet, whether he's wanted to or not. The scion of a storied political family, Cuomo resigned in disgrace from the governorship in 2021 after an investigation led by state Attorney General Letitia James found that he had harassed 11 women and subjected some of them to unwanted touching and groping. A formal agreement between the state executive chamber and the U.S. Justice Department, released in 2024, found Cuomo had subjected at least 13 female employees to a 'sexually hostile work environment.' But Cuomo isn't the only candidate seeking political redemption in New York City this month. Should he win Tuesday's Democratic primary, he'll take on incumbent Eric Adams, a Democrat running for re-election as an independent. Adams was indicted in September on federal corruption charges, which were dropped this year when the Justice Department argued, among other things, that the case distracted from Adams' ability to enact President Donald Trump's immigration agenda. And then there's Anthony Weiner. Weiner resigned from Congress in 2011 after accidentally tweeting a sexually explicit photo of himself. More sexually explicit messages came out in 2013 when he ran for mayor in a first political comeback attempt. In 2016, the FBI launched an investigation after Weiner he was accused of sending sexual messages to a 15-year-old girl. Upon seizing Weiner's computer, investigators discovered Weiner's wife, Huma Abedin, had used the same laptop to send emails to her boss: then-Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. The ordeal sparked a new FBI review of Clinton's use of a private email server just days before the 2016 presidential election, which Clinton lost to Trump. The FBI's investigation also led to Weiner's pleading guilty in 2017 to transferring obscene material to a minor, being sentenced to almost two years in prison and registering as a sex offender. Weiner is now out of prison, and his political animal can't be caged. He is vying for a spot on the New York City Council — part of an unofficial slate testing what voters will forgive and what they won't in 2025. In an interview this month, Weiner argued that the way he's handled his controversies can't be compared to the ways Cuomo and Adams have handled theirs. 'I'm not denying. I'm not pointing fingers. I'm not asking for a pardon,' said Weiner, running for a district encompassing the Lower East Side and East Village neighborhoods of Manhattan. 'I've served my time. I accepted responsibility. Now I'm moving forward,' Weiner said. In the first Democratic mayoral debate, when the moderators asked Cuomo to share a regret from his years in politics, he did not share a personal failing; instead, he said he regretted 'that the Democratic Party got to a point that we allowed Mr. Trump to be elected.' Cuomo's rivals aren't letting him forget the accusations he's faced. Asked a seemingly innocuous question at that debate about improving public safety on New York City's subway system, underdog candidate Michael Blake jumped in: 'The people who don't feel safe are young women, mothers and grandmothers around Andrew Cuomo. That's the greatest threat to public safety in New York City.' One week later, during the next debate, Cuomo's main rival, democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani, unleashed a new slew of attacks. After Cuomo had lambasted Mamdani over his experience, Mamdani pounced. 'I have never hounded the 13 women who credibly accused me of sexual harassment. I have never sued for their gynecological records, and I have never done those things because I am not you, Mr. Cuomo,' Mamdani said in a monologue that went viral. The allegations that led to his resignation — which Cuomo has repeatedly denied, though he also said upon resigning that there had been "generational and cultural shifts" that he "didn't fully appreciate" — have come up in the campaign alongside other controversies from his governorship. Another 2021 report from the state attorney general accused him of undercounting nursing home deaths during the Covid-19 pandemic. On Juneteenth, City Council member Chi Ossé, who endorsed Mamdani, posted on X to resurface a 2019 interview in which Cuomo said the N-word while quoting a New York Times op-ed. Still, Cuomo leads the pack in polling, though he could face a fight due to the city's ranked choice voting system. Adams, too, has denied wrongdoing and claimed vindication since the federal charges he faced were dropped. Weiner says his experience has shaped the way he perceives Cuomo's and Adams' situations. 'Going through the maelstrom of public outcry, outcry and scandal, I do read the papers differently than I used to,' said Weiner, 60. 'I have what they say in Yiddish or Hebrew 'rachmones.' I have feeling for people in difficult circumstances.' Despite the empathy, he said comparing his checkered to Cuomo's and Adams' is 'apples and oranges.' 'They're denying they did anything wrong. They're suing their detractors and their accusers. I'm accepting responsibility. I paid my debt to society,' he said. 'I have this notion that everything I have done up to now has led me to this exact spot.' For New Yorkers heading to the ballot this cycle, forgiveness is not one-size-fits-all. Carmen Perez, 55, from West Harlem, is willing to give Cuomo another chance but isn't crazy about the other embattled candidates. 'I've seen what Cuomo can do,' said Perez, who runs a program for senior citizens. 'During the pandemic, he literally just took over and said, 'This is how we're going to do this and this is how we're going to get through this.'' 'That's what you want to hear from a leader during a crisis.' When it comes to Adams, Perez is less enthusiastic. 'I would hope that most people would take this opportunity and really examine why people are running and what's the real purpose behind their running,' she said of Adams, implying the controversies around him are stickier than the ones around Cuomo. 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NBC News
5 hours ago
- NBC News
Rahm Emanuel confronts 'awkward' prospect of facing a home-state rival in the 2028 presidential race
CHICAGO — Rahm Emanuel admits the potential of taking on JB Pritzker in a 2028 presidential run is 'going to be awkward.' Over decades in public life, Emanuel has had stints as White House chief of staff, congressman, cutthroat Democratic operative, overseas diplomat and more. But around here, it's a little more simple. Emanuel was a two-term Chicago mayor. Pritzker is a two-term Illinois governor. If the two end up as part of the 2028 Democratic presidential field, the longtime allies will inevitably bump up against each other — and like most political fights, it could get ugly. 'Look, JB and I are friends,' Emanuel said in an interview. The two recently had dinner, he noted. They text. When Emanuel came into town in his capacity as U.S. ambassador to Japan, they made a point of getting breakfast. 'We're going to continue to be friends, but if we're running for the same position, it will be awkward.' (Asked to expound on what would make it awkward, the famously unguarded Emanuel said, 'It's so f-----g — it's self-evident, Jesus Christ.') When Pritzker was a private citizen and Emanuel served as mayor, the two collaborated on bringing tech incubator 1871 to the city. While serving in Japan, Emanuel worked with Pritzker on bringing quantum computing to the University of Chicago, he said. The sun set on Emanuel's mayoralty in 2019, after the controversial handling of the fatal police shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. At one point, some had even written Emanuel's political obituary. Pritzker, a billionaire, emerged as governor in the meantime and positioned himself as a fighter in the Trump resistance, with a penchant for grabbing headlines — and making investments in battleground states — that looked like it was leading to an inevitable White House run. Locally, Pritzker wrested control of the state party and has built a formidable organizing operation. Now though, Emanuel is back stateside and back in politics, running through the national podcast circuit. Some observers are pointing to his prickly exterior and unvarnished criticisms of his own party as perhaps a good fit for the moment. His open exploration of a presidential run allowed him to leap in front of Pritzker, who is ensconced in a daily waiting game, neither saying he's running for a third term as governor (though he's expected to do so soon) nor admitting aspirations to enter the 2028 presidential fray (though he has made notable visits to some states that voted early in the last primary). Emanuel, 65, noted any 2028 presidential race is bound to be crowded, and he said he would set himself apart by leaning on accumulated experience through the wide-ranging roles he's held over the years. That spans from heading party-line brawls on Capitol Hill to working in two White Houses (Barack Obama's and Bill Clinton's) to his private-sector stint as an investment banker. It's among the attributes he believes could underpin an argument to be the nation's chief executive. Emanuel points to two overarching qualities that he said would set him apart. The first, he said, is having taken on a host of industries over the years to forge new laws or to pressure them into reform. He ticked off going after insurance companies, helping impose regulations around banking, suing pharmaceutical companies over opiates and clashing with the NRA to get an assault weapons ban. The second is having experience in every corridor of power inside and outside of government, while also having up-close brushes with public tragedy and grief that come with the job of being mayor. 'You have to be comfortable in the boardroom, and you have to be comfortable in the Situation Room, and sometimes you have to be really comfortable in the emergency room. And I think I know all those spaces,' Emanuel said of being president. 'JB is a friend, as is [Pennsylvania Gov.] Josh Shapiro, as is [California] Gov. [Gavin] Newsom. … And so they'll offer what they have, and I'll offer what I have.' 'I think I know something, from the Situation Room to the emergency room to the classroom to the boardroom to the family room,' he continued. 'The problem for Democrats over the last four years is they got comfortable only in the bathroom and the locker room.' Emanuel, in his spree of media interviews this year, often complained that Democrats focused too heavily on issues like gender and bathroom access and not enough on improving education and the bottom line for middle-class families. That's a natural dividing line between him and Pritzker, who has unapologetically embraced getting into those kinds of political - cultural battles. 'Voters didn't turn out for Democrats last November not because they don't want us to fight for our values, but because they think we don't want to fight for our values,' Pritzker said in April at a Democratic Party dinner in New Hampshire. If Emanuel has an interest in his own run for governor — as Pritzker stated in a CNN interview in May — he doesn't publicly entertain it. 'My assumption is he's running for governor. … I'd be surprised if he doesn't,' Emanuel said. He added: 'We have a great state. We have big challenges, and they can't be ignored.' That leads back to the 'awkward' part. If Pritzker formally launches into a third gubernatorial campaign — as some political observers, Emanuel included, believe he will — Pritzker will be stuck in a way that Emanuel isn't. Pritzker can hardly publicly indulge presidential ambitions as he's facing daily budget worries or battling the Trump White House on deportations. By the November 2026 gubernatorial election, Emanuel and other Democratic presidential hopefuls may be leaps and bounds ahead of Pritzker on the national campaign trail. 'You give Rahm Emanuel a year and five months' head start and you think you're going to push him out? That's cuckoo,' said a Democratic strategist who has worked on multiple presidential campaigns and asked for anonymity to speak bluntly. 'It tells me he doesn't know Rahm and maybe he doesn't know himself.' A second Democratic strategist countered, 'Pritzker is always going to win that fight because he's a Pritzker.' A Pritzker ally, meanwhile, argued that it was Emanuel who could face his own hurdles, including having moved too far from the left, inviting struggle in a Democratic primary. Short of bowing out from seeking a third term, Pritzker could confront political circumstances similar to those of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who first sought re-election as governor and then, shortly after the first legislative session following that victory, launched a 2024 GOP presidential primary campaign. DeSantis dropped out of the presidential race after a stinging defeat in Iowa. As Pritzker contends with those dynamics, Emanuel is moving forward exploring his message. 'If I decide to run, and if I was fortunate enough to serve, the only interest group I would focus on is the middle class and their American dream, and their children's shot at it,' Emanuel said. 'That is No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3 focus.'


The Herald Scotland
7 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
ICE arrested Brad Lander. Democrats should follow his lead
"We're not just showing up for just a few families, or for the strength of our democracy," Lander told the supporters waiting for him outside the federal courthouse. "We are showing up for the future of New York City." While it's unclear that Lander's arrest will make any difference in his chances to be New York City's next mayor, one thing is now certain: He is the kind of person the city and Democrats need in the Trump era. Democrats should be fighting Trump's systematic hate Lander is now a member of an exclusive group of Democratic politicians who have gotten into legal trouble for combating the Trump administration's extreme deportation agenda. These politicians are not doing anything wrong - they are simply trying to stand up for the immigrants who make this country great. Opinion: Trump lied about the LA protests so you wouldn't see what he's really doing The first to face legal repercussions was Milwaukee County Judge Hannah Dugan, who was arrested in April and later indicted for allegedly assisting an undocumented immigrant in escaping arrest. Then in May, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested at an ICE detention center when three members of New Jersey's congressional delegation arrived for an unannounced inspection. Rep. LaMonica McIver, D-New Jersey, who was also arrested that day, was indicted on June 10 for allegedly interfering with immigration officers. Less than a week before Lander's arrest, Sen. Alex Padilla, D-California, was handcuffed and thrown out of a Department of Homeland Security news conference. This defiance is encouraging to see. People who have the privilege of a public platform are putting their careers on the line to stand up for those who are being terrorized by the federal government. These actions, so long as they are peaceful, are how Democrats should be reacting to the Trump administration. We need a mayoral candidate who suits New York Until this moment, Lander had flown under the radar for the duration of the city's mayoral race. Despite his position as the city's top financial officer and an endorsement from a panel of experts with The New York Times, Lander has been polling behind front-runner Andrew Cuomo, a former New York governor, and Zohran Mamdani, a member of the New York State Assembly. Who is Zohran Mamdani? A Democratic socialist is running for NYC mayor. I hope he can rally voters. | Opinion It's not that Lander is a bad candidate - he's experienced and policy-driven, and he has a progressive view of what the city can be. He and Mamdani have cross-endorsed each other in the hopes of besting Cuomo in the ranked-choice voting system. Lander just doesn't have Cuomo's name recognition or Mamdani's charisma. Opinion alerts: Get columns from your favorite columnists + expert analysis on top issues, delivered straight to your device through the USA TODAY app. Don't have the app? Download it for free from your app store. By getting arrested, Lander has shown New Yorkers that someone is willing to stand up for their values of protecting immigrants. We don't have to elect Cuomo, who had to resign in disgrace in 2021 after more than a dozen women accused him of sexual harassment. Nor do we have to elect incumbent Eric Adams, who has welcomed ICE into our city against the wishes of the voters. Lander is showing us that we could have someone who is willing to fight the Trump administration while leading the nation's most populous city. And he's one of several showing Democrats the way forward. Follow USA TODAY columnist Sara Pequeno on X, formerly Twitter: @sara__pequeno