2025-07-23
1 小时 23 分钟From the Free Press, this is Honestly, and I'm Barry Weiss.
Rahm Emanuel is giving every indication that he's running for president in 2028, including the fact that he's my guest on today's show.
Emanuel, who's now 65 years old, has spent decades making a name for himself as one of the Democratic Party's fiercest and most effective partisans, a true knife fighter.
And I think you'll see that spiciness in today's interview.
But can the dealmaker...
The guy so adept at pulling the levers of power behind the scenes really become the front man.
And as the party continues to pull leftward, is there really room for an old-school moderate liberal like Rahm to be the standard bearer?
Last, but perhaps most important, does he have the bedside manner to be president?
Or will people love his blunt nature and find it refreshing?
One thing's for sure, he certainly has a resume to run on.
While still in his early 30s, Rahm Emanuel became a key advisor to Bill Clinton's 1992 campaign.
Before he was 40, his career was already the stuff of legend, thanks to stunts like sending a dead fish to a Democratic pollster who had upset him, and that time in 1992, after Clinton won the White House, when staffers met around a picnic table to celebrate their accomplishments.
Rahm, instead, picked up a knife and began listing the Democrats he felt were insufficiently supportive of Clinton.
Dead man, he yelled after each name, jabbing the knife into the table.
His nickname, Rombo, after Sylvester Stallone's fearsome commando, became so pervasive that even his mother started calling him that.
Meantime, in Hollywood, Rom became the inspiration for a leading character in the West Wing, Josh Lyman.
After Clinton's victory, Rom spent five years as a top White House aide.
He then returned to his native Illinois.
where he was elected to Congress in 2002.
Four years later, in 2006, he was the mastermind of the Democratic Party's wildly successful effort to retake the House of Representatives, making Nancy Pelosi Speaker.