Rahm Emanuel thinks Democrats have a crime problem, and it's not just about statistics. The former Chicago mayor and current ambassador to Japan is urging his party to scrap the soft-on-crime image and adopt what he calls a middle path on public safety—one that doesn't involve either defunding police departments or rolling tanks down city streets.
Emanuel plans to spell out his vision Wednesday at the University of Chicago Crime Lab's Policing Leadership Academy ceremony. According to POLITICO, he sees voters trapped between two unappealing options: the "defund the police" slogan that energized progressives a few years back, and former President Donald Trump's plan to deploy the National Guard in Democratic-run cities.
The Middle Ground Strategy
Emanuel's pitch boils down to a catchy line: "More cops on the beat, and getting kids, guns and gangs off the street." His plan emphasizes beefed-up community policing, firm consequences for violent offenders, stricter gun law enforcement, and expanded youth outreach programs.
It's a framework built on his time running Chicago, which matters because the city hit its deadliest year in two decades in 2016. Crime dropped over the following two years—a shift the police department credited to stronger community relationships and new technology. Emanuel also poured resources into mentoring programs and summer job opportunities for young people.
The Baggage He's Carrying
Of course, Emanuel's Chicago record isn't all positive. His handling of Laquan McDonald's 2014 killing by a white officer still draws sharp criticism. Emanuel has said he misjudged how deep the distrust ran between Black residents and police. He's pointed to his relationship with Pastor Marvin Hunter, McDonald's great uncle, who backed him during his confirmation as ambassador to Japan, as evidence of reconciliation.
Why Democrats Should Listen (According to Emanuel)
Emanuel argues that Democrats can't just point to falling crime statistics when voters don't feel safer. The "defund" slogan damaged the party nationally, and while high-profile Democrats have abandoned it, the perception lingers. He believes the party needs to tackle crime concerns head-on as midterms approach next year.
He's also taking shots at Trump's National Guard proposal, arguing that federal troops don't know local neighborhoods and that the money spent on deployments could train hundreds of local officers instead. That said, he concedes that concentrated deployments might occasionally free up police resources in other areas.
Emanuel hasn't announced whether he'll actually run in 2028, but the positioning is clear. He's offering Democrats a way to sound tough on crime without embracing Trump's approach—a tricky balance that could define the party's strategy heading into the next election cycle.