“Siri, what is insider trading?”
That’s how one reader responded to Tuesday reporting by The American Prospect‘s Daniel Boguslaw that Rahm Emanuel, who is supposedly mulling a bid for Democratic National Committee (DNC) chair, made some concerning financial moves while in his current government job.
Emanuel is the U.S. ambassador to Japan. He was previously the mayor of Chicago, a Democratic Illinois congressman, and a key adviser to former Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. While in the House of Representatives, he chaired the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and then the party’s caucus in the chamber. He’s also been an investment banker.
As Boguslaw detailed Tuesday:
Periodic transaction reports filed with the Office of Governmental Ethics over the past two years suggest that Chicago’s golden boy may be better served returning to his roots on Wall Street, given the six-figure trades he executed at highly opportune moments in U.S.-Japanese trade relations. Among the millions of dollars of stock trades Emanuel conducted between 2021 and 2024 while serving as ambassador, one purchase jumps out. On September 29, 2023, Emanuel bought between $250,000 and $500,000 worth of stocks in CoreWeave, a leading AI cloud computing service.
Emanuel’s purchase took place one day before the Japanese government announced a $320 million subsidy to Micron Technology to manufacture storage components that are essential to the Nvidia chips which CoreWeave relies on for its AI computation services.
Emanuel “purchased between $100,000 and $250,000 worth of Ocient stock on March 8, 2024, before the close of the firm’s series B raise,” after the Illinois “data analytics company’s CEO Chris Gladwin traveled to Japan in October on a trade delegation mission,” Boguslaw noted. “At the end of July, Rahm also purchased between $50,000 and $100,000 worth of stock in Monroe Capital, a Chicago-based middle-market lender that specializes in collateralized debt obligations, the Frankenstein financial product that crashed global markets in 2008.”
While Emanuel did not respond to the Prospect‘s request for comment, Jeff Hauser, executive director of the Revolving Door Project, declared on social media that it was a “MASSIVE STORY!”
Hauser told Common Dreams that “being ambassador to Japan is a big job, but normally owing to its importance to America’s relationship with a key ally in a critical area of the globe, and not because of the access it apparently provides to actionable stock tips.”
“Ambassador Emanuel’s brain ought to have been focused on improving America’s lot in East Asia, not maximizing his retirement account,” he said. “We at Revolving Door Project have long argued that senior government officials should be limited to investing in diversified mutual funds rather than stock by stock. That Emanuel was making exotic investments in businesses he may have learned about on the government’s dime only underscores the need for such reforms.”
“If Democrats are to ever put a full and final end to Trumpism, they are going to need to develop a clear and consistent critique of why corruption by public officials is a bad thing. That would make Rahm Emanuel among the worst possible choices for DNC chair, especially since Sen. Menendez seems likely to be unavailable for the position,” Hauser added, referring to Bob Menendez, a former Democratic senator from New Jersey who in July was convicted of taking bribes.
As Common Dreamsreported last week, progressive critics of Emanuel have called his potential leadership of the DNC—after various devastating losses for the party on Election Day earlier this month—a “sick joke” and “the worst idea in the world.”
Noting Emanuel’s consideration of the job in an email to supporters on Tuesday, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said that “there is a disease in Washington of Democrats who spend more time listening to the donor class than working people. If you want to know the seed of the party’s political crisis—that’s it.”
“The DNC needs an organizer who gets people,” she asserted. “Not someone who sends fish heads in the mail.”
Martin O’Malley, a former Democratic presidential candidate and Maryland governor, and Ken Martin, the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party chair and a DNC vice chair, have both formally launched their campaigns for the position.
Other potential contenders for the DNC post include Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler and Chuck Rocha, a political strategist for the latest campaign of Sen.-elect Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) and the presidential campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).
Sanders, who caucuses with Democrats, said after the elections earlier this month that “it should come as no great surprise that a Democratic Party which has abandoned working-class people would find that the working class has abandoned them.”
According toCBS News:
Rocha said he’s still waiting to see how the field develops before jumping in, and “if there’s a better candidate that really stands for what I want to see done with the party.” But Rocha has set several action items he would take as chair: eliminate education requirements for senior DNC positions, mandating that state parties “be more inclusive” and diverse with consultant hiring, and to focus on building party infrastructure in all 50 states.
Asked about Martin’s and O’Malley’s campaigns, Rocha called them “names that are from the institution.”
“I think we need somebody from the outside and a strategist to come in and rebuild the party,” said Rocha, who noted that his non-college background and upbringing in East Texas could be an advantage as the party looks to reconnect with working-class voters.
Politicoreported Tuesday that another Sanders ally, James Zogby, “expects to formally launch his campaign in the coming days.”
A longtime DNC member and president of the Arab American Institute, Zogby told Politico that he was motivated to run by his anger over Republican President-elect Donald Trump’s defeat of Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.
Zogby criticized Harris for campaigning with former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Okla.), said the Democratic Party was too “focused on suburban women and not on white working-class people,” and called the decision to not invite a Palestinian American to speak at the national convention “unimaginative, overly cautious, and completely out of touch with where voters are.”