Freakonomics Radio - 415. How Rahm Emanuel Would Run the World
Episode Date: April 27, 2020As a former top adviser to presidents Clinton and Obama, he believes in the power of the federal government. But as former mayor of Chicago, he says that cities are where real problems get solved — ...especially in the era of Covid-19.
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Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner, and welcome to this special bonus episode.
If you've been listening to the show for a while, you know that Steve Levitt, my Freakonomics
friend and co-author, is an economist at the University of Chicago.
You also know that when I was starting this podcast 10 years ago, Levitt thought it was
a pretty dumb idea.
Now, to his credit, it probably was a dumb idea back then. But over time,
podcasting became a real thing and Freakonomics Radio became my real job.
Levitt, meanwhile, kept doing all the things an economics professor does. This includes writing
academic papers. And you may recall that Levitt recently checked out how often his three most
recent papers had been cited by other researchers.
And I got onto Google Scholar, and the sum of the citations across those three papers was six.
And I said to myself, wait a second, I just spent three years pouring my heart into something that has basically been read by six academics and nobody else in the world.
What am I doing?
It was around this time that Levitt decided that maybe podcasting wasn't so dumb after all.
Because whenever he'd talk about one of his new papers on a Freakonomics Radio episode,
he'd hear from a lot more than six people.
This show has a global audience of more than four million people.
So Levitt, being a pretty bright fellow and an economist,
he decided that he should probably take his supply to where the demand is.
A few months ago, he guest-hosted an episode called
America's Math Curriculum Doesn't Add Up.
Let's just say that someone made you the math czar tomorrow.
What would be some of your first reforms?
So I would change the curriculum to really reflect real mathematics.
And I would also change it to reflect the 21st century because math still looks in classrooms pretty much as it did in Victorian days.
Levitt did a nice job with this episode and it helped kickstart a national conversation about math reform.
And so we got to thinking, wouldn't it be great if Levitt decided to jump into this podcasting racket with both feet?
Wouldn't it be great if Levitt would maybe start a podcast of his own?
The fact is, we've been working to develop a few new shows as part of a Freakonomics Radio network that you'll soon be hearing more about.
Now, what exactly would Levitt's show be?
Well, one of the things I most admire about Levitt is his intellect, of course.
But it's an unusual intellect.
He's much more likely and willing than the average person to think truly original thoughts.
He's also got a unique type of curiosity,
both in subject matter and methodology. I think a lot of this goes back to his father,
who's a doctor and medical researcher. Levitt talked about his dad in an episode we put out
in 2011 called Things Our Fathers Gave Us. So he'd take me to the hospital where he worked,
and when no one was looking, we'd sneak into the room with radioactive materials and play games with them.
It wasn't just, or even principally, laws that we violated.
He taught me to flout the limits that society imposed.
One of his favorite activities, starting roughly when I was 10 years old, was to present scenarios from work, involving other doctors making gross misdiagnoses.
He would tell the stories in such a way that the answer he was looking for was attainable, even for a 10-year-old. And when I gave the answer he wanted, he would tell me I was
already a better doctor than the one who had handled the patient. He made me believe that
there was nothing I couldn't do if only I put my mind to it.
Levitt's dad, Michael Levitt, is one of the world's preeminent researchers on intestinal gas. He's known as the king of farts, the man who gave status to flatus.
Michael Levitt was an outsider, but an outsider by design.
And I would argue that Steve Levitt is also an outsider by design.
One of those rare people willing to look at things from an angle that most of us can barely imagine until he comes up with an insight that seems obvious in retrospect, but none of us
could see it. This brings us to today's episode. Let's consider it a pilot for a new podcast where
Steve Levitt will be having one-on-one conversations with other smart and unusual thinkers, other
outsiders by design.
His first interview subject is Rahm Emanuel, the recently departed mayor of Chicago and even more famously, a major player in both the Clinton and Obama White Houses.
As always, we are happy to hear any feedback you've got, especially your suggestions for
Levitt's future interview subjects.
Just drop us an email at radio at Freakonomics.com.
Okay, Steve Levitt and Rahm Emanuel
coming up right after this.
From Stitcher and Dubner Productions,
this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores
the hidden side of everything, with today's special guest host, Stephen Levitt.
I'm fascinated by unconventional people, probably because I'm so weird myself.
I especially like unconventional people who probably because I'm so weird myself. I especially like
unconventional people who also happen to be really smart. I find that if I can spend an hour talking
with someone like that, it often completely reshapes the way I see the world. But there's a
problem. It's hard to find people like that, and even harder to get them to talk to me once I've
found them. Usually, they've got something much more important to do. So I hatched a plan. What if I start a podcast? Maybe I could convince some of
those folks who otherwise wouldn't talk to me to talk to me. So far, I would say the plan is
working pretty well. Today's guest, Rahm Emanuel, is the first person I approached for the podcast,
and I can guarantee you he would not have spent two hours
over the course of two days talking with me absent this podcast. Typically, I have zero interest in
politics. I don't know much about political science, and it seems like politicians mostly
rehash the same arguments every day with little desire to find real answers. But I was eager to
talk with Ram because I had just finished reading his fascinating new book, The Nation City, Why Mayors Are Now Running the World.
It's full of deep insights, and that's no surprise since he has a reputation for being one of the
smartest people in politics. Presidents Clinton and Obama both relied heavily on his advice.
Because of his work during the Obama administration, Rahm's name became permanently associated with the phrase, never let a good crisis go to waste.
He also spent three terms as a congressman from Illinois and two terms as mayor of Chicago.
He comes from a family of overachievers.
His older brother Ezekiel is a leading bioethicist and advised the Obama administration on healthcare
reform.
His younger brother Ari is at the top of William Morris Endeavor, one of the biggest talent agencies in the world. Of the brothers, Ram may have the biggest reputation
for being a foul-mouthed, fearless, ruthless maniac. As a teenager working at Arby's, Ram had
an on-the-job accident that took off half of the middle finger on his right hand. The story goes
that when the doctor unwrapped Ram's hand after surgery, he flicked everyone off and said from now on he'd have to give people the middle finger twice to have the
desired effect.
While still in his 30s and working in the Clinton administration, Rahm is reputed to
have pulled British Prime Minister Tony Blair aside just before he took the stage at an
event and admonished him, this is important, don't f**k it up.
Now that is somebody I want to get to know better.
Here's a guy who has been wildly successful, and yet it is totally clear he doesn't play by the
rules that usually turn me away from politics. As I waited for Rahm to show up for a first
interview in Chicago, I started to have some misgivings. Rahm's team had called ahead to
the sound guy at the studio. Rahm was in a terrible mood, they warned.
He had injured his leg the night before and was in intense pain.
In addition, Ram's father Benjamin, the two were extremely close,
had passed away a few months earlier.
The day of our interview would have been his father's 93rd birthday.
Knowing Ram's fierce reputation, I can honestly say
I was a little bit afraid as we sat down to talk.
Maybe you can hear it in my voice.
We're rolling?
We're rolling.
Great.
Why don't you tell us your name, what you're doing now,
and a couple of the jobs you've done in the past.
Ram Israel Emanuel, father of three,
former senior advisor to President Clinton,
member of Congress and in the leadership,
chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee,
President Obama's chief of staff, and then mayor of the city of Chicago for two terms.
The thesis of your book, Ram, is that mayors run the world, and COVID must be the toughest
possible test of that thesis. It's a truly global disaster that's disproportionately
hitting the large cities, and it's one that requires national and cross-national cooperation.
Do you think of COVID as being the exception to your rule that mayors run the world?
One of the principles of the book is that as the national government was dysfunctional,
local and state leaders were going to step up.
Now, I say in the book, and I want to repeat, there is no replacement on certain levels.
I mean, you can't really have an immigration policy
or climate change policy just in Chicago. You do need the national government to do certain things.
I do think one of the things that's going to come out of this is that we're no longer going to
accept this kind of dysfunction. It's just not going to be acceptable that the wealthiest country
is this fundamentally unprepared for the future.
That said, you know, you can look at state and local leaders who have done
extraordinary things because, you know, power vacuums get filled. Mayor Garcetti was the first
to say that he's going to make wearing mask the blanket policy of Los Angeles. And then all of a
sudden CDC a week later is issuing that guidance. Let me all of a sudden, CDC, a week later, is issuing that
guidance. Let me toss off a hypothesis I have, which is related to what you've been saying.
So this particular crisis has been incredibly information-rich. It's been data-rich.
And the actions people have to take depend on their ability to understand
data and models and forecasting. Because the point at
which you have to take radical action is a point at which almost nobody was sick, almost no one was
dying. And my own hypothesis is that we've done a really bad job in this country at making people
data literate. And our school systems haven't focused on data. They haven't kept up with the
advances in thinking and computing over the last 50 years.
And I think we're paying the price in this epidemic because many public servants and
many policymakers aren't trained to think in the right way about data science and models.
What's your reaction to that? Well, this is rear for an Emmanuel. I haven't thought about that,
so I don't know. But usually we have answers before we have questions.
My knee-jerk answer is I'm not sure everybody should be walking around being a data scientist.
That's what data scientists are for.
But let me say this.
We're having a big argument inside the Emanuel brothers.
Everybody's guessing, even the best data scientists.
And everybody goes, oh, just follow the scientists.
Well, you know, I come from a medical family.
My dad, you know, how many times my dad asked for a second opinion?
There's a reason you asked for the second opinion.
The science, I mean, I hate this analogy when everybody goes, oh, just follow the science.
Well, the science isn't clear.
We're chasing information and it's moving in real time as we're making judgments. And that's where you're going to need just making a judgment.
In the storm of a crisis, you're making informed, educated guesses. And the emphasis is on the word guess, not informed or educated. Important talent of a data scientist is common sense and thoughtfulness, and data alone are
never the answer. It's combining data with reasonable models of the world, with humility.
But I want to give you credit, Ram, as well, because you were just able to say,
I don't know, which I think says a lot about you. And I think on those questions where you
answer with confidence, I think that should increase our confidence of the answers you're
giving. I may have you call some family members.
If you were a public servant right now and you had to think about coming out of this quarantine, what job would you want to have and what would you be trying to do?
I think I had the two jobs I would want in any crisis, which is the mayor and chief of staff.
On the national level, I think you got to do three things right now. One is how to step up a robust testing system because you're going to need it both for identification of hotspots and the ability to transition to some level of I think on the economic level, the first bill was a disaster relief bill.
It's very clear there's going to be more need for disaster relief. And then how to really think
through what a stimulus bill should be. And I've thought about, you know, not only the normal
infrastructure, which will take two to three years to spend out the 5G and broadband universal you're going to
need because we're going to have online learning, telemedicine, and stay-at-home work that's going
to become the new norm. And you got to have a floor to guarantee equitable participation in
that new economy. And then I think major, major investments in our public health. I think,
you know, to quote Warren Buffett, when the tide goes out, you see who was swimming without shorts. And even though I think we have a great healthcare system in the
country, the kind of starvation budget of our public health indicates that we have not kept
up with future public health needs. And then third, you know, if you look at history, in the
beginning of the era of the Cold War, we realized we needed a more coordinated effort. The National Security Council was established.
After 9-11, we created the Homeland Security Department and the DNI, the Director of National
Intelligence, to bring all our intelligence agencies together.
After the poor response to Hurricane Andrew in 1992 in Florida, President Clinton, when
he got elected, elevated FEMA to a cabinet level,
put a serious person there and plussed up the budget. This is our fifth pandemic in 20 years.
You're going to need a new office for bringing together all the resources so there's one person
in charge and accountable for our public health, early detection, mobilization, and deployment of resources.
Because SARS, MERS, H1N1, swine flu, Ebola, since not one of those really destabilized us,
we got our guard down, but we've been exposed, and now we're going to have to organize. You can't
have CDC, NIH, FEMA, the military, the intelligence, all playing a role in this,
but nobody accountable for it. It strikes me that if we were willing to make sacrifices on privacy,
we could handle this pandemic much better. So for instance, if we follow China and other
countries lead using cell phone data to track people's movements, or let's say we did that
in the future to understand both how things are being spread, but also to keep an eye on people who are under quarantine and whatnot. What's your reaction? I mean,
it seems to me that if we were just looking out for the welfare of society, we would be making
big privacy sacrifices right now. But I suspect that that's an extremely unpopular perspective.
It is, but you need it. The question is, how do you build a policy that allows you to both protect
people's public health without violating their civil liberties? I do think there's a way to do it,
but be vigilant, meaning you don't set the rules and then not think about them for 20 years.
You set the rules and then you're constantly monitoring to both ensure that they're being
applied appropriately, and then more importantly, updating them as both technology and other vulnerabilities are identified.
Why did you choose public service?
I grew up in a home where politics, not just electoral politics, but current events was debated constantly. My mother was an activist
who set up and ran the CORE here in Chicago, Congress on Racial Equality, did all the open
housing and integration of beaches in Chicago. My father, as an immigrant, was a pediatrician
trying to set up a practice. And in 1962, he's been here like three years, barely speaks English, and he quit the American Medical
Association over national healthcare, which he was for and they were against. And then just a few
years later, with maybe just a few more words of English under his belt, he sues the city of
Chicago over lead in household paint and organized the pediatricians against that.
Your dad was certainly ahead of his time with lead.
Just 52 years.
Yeah. But your mom as well. I mean, the racial attitudes in Chicago in the 1960s,
they weren't particularly friendly, right?
No. In fact, when we lived on Buena, which is in Edgewater, we got kicked out of there
because of all the, as the the landlord said all the colored people that
were coming to the house and so it was very much in the home and both of them both on economic and
social and racial justice demanded the kids do something also of social and political value
so let's fast forward as i understand it you took a huge bet on a governor that nobody ever heard of. And I got to know Bill Clinton and believed what he was doing.
And we kept up that dialogue.
And I decided I was single, young.
I always wanted to do a presidential.
And the guy was at 2%, a whopping 2%.
Bill Clinton, after the debacle of his 88 convention speech, was kind of a dumb bet.
If you were taking a safe bet, you would have done Mario Cuomo. And I thought, I'll just get this done with my system. I want to do a presidential.
I want to try this out. And I believe in Bill Clinton. And what was so special about him?
Bill Clinton always said that the most underappreciated, undervalued thing in politics
is ideas. And I thought he had a new way of thinking about it. And I thought could pick
the lock that Republicans had at that point
because they've gone the 12-year stretch in the White House.
You have to be idealistic enough to know why you're doing what you're doing
and then tough enough to get it done.
And if you look at successful presidents in history,
neither one tips scales too far one way or the other.
They have both of those skill sets,
and you look at all the ones that never make it, they usually tip one way or the other. They have both of those skill sets. And you look at all the ones that never make it, they usually tip one way or the other. So Bill Clinton in 1997 proposed Children's Health
Insurance Program with pediatric care, eye and dental by expanding Medicaid. The Republicans
came back and countered with pediatric care, no eye and dental, but outside of Medicaid. And we cut the deal. It was President Clinton's
pediatric care, eye and dental, but outside of Medicaid, which is a Republican model.
The Republicans cared more about whether it was inside or outside of an entitlement program,
Medicaid. And President says, we're here to get kids healthcare. We're not here to get
a program expanded. Newt Gingrich says, we're going to accuse you of nothing but welfare for people that work. And President Clinton said, he said,
Mr. Speaker, I'm just going to tell you this right now. You just go ahead. You can throw me into that
briar patch because when I'm done, I'm going to have a policeman, a fireman, a teacher, and a
nurse standing outside and you can call them welfare. Make my day. Go ahead and throw me into
the briar patch. And Monday morning, we scheduled that press conference,
and they were folded like a cheap suit the next day.
When you talk about Clinton, I could sit here all day,
but let's talk about Obama.
So you left the Clinton administration
and won election to the U.S. Congress
and did three terms there,
and then you got the call from Obama
to come and be his chief of staff.
Yeah, I was trying to change my phone number.
I didn't really want to do it.
That to me seems like the best job on the planet.
Like, I would like to have that job.
The difference between you and I, see?
Yeah.
I knew what the White House was like.
You don't.
Okay?
I know what the chief of staff job is.
So what is the chief of staff job?
It's the most miserable job in America.
So it's the toughest job.
The world is falling apart. It's a the toughest job. The world is falling apart.
It's a tough job even when the world is going good.
Worst is probably the wrong adjective.
It's the toughest, most thankless job.
That's probably, which adds up to the worst job.
Let me back up.
I become chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, win it, and Nancy becomes the first female speaker.
I then become caucus chair, which is fourth in ranking, and I'm basically a sophomore.
I had been to the White House. I was now on my road in the House, my own voting card,
my own identity, et cetera. And all of a sudden, if you go to the White House, as I used to say,
the White House is family-friendly to the first the White House is family friendly to the first family.
It's not family friendly to anybody.
And I would have to go six months away from my children.
They would have to finish school, then come move out there.
Everybody would have to disrupt their lives.
And even when they moved out there, I'd barely see them.
And I didn't want that.
But I also grew up, my grandfather, my mother's son, my grandpa Herman,
if the president asks you to do something, it's either yes or yes, sir. And it took me about 48
hours to figure out which answer I wanted to give. So one of the things I've heard, I know nothing
about Washington, is that the most important thing about the chief of staff is that the flow
of information that could potentially get to the president is infinite.
And the president's got finite time.
And what makes it so powerful is that you control what the president sees.
I used to tell the cabinet this.
You can get in to see the president, but you're not walking in with a problem.
I want to see all the solutions you're offering.
You are not allowed to dump on the president your problem.
After his day, he's supposed to think of your
solution so i want to see your solutions two or three nothing less and you can't have a
phony one a pig in the poke and then the one you want but you're scared of the politics
you got to have real viable options and nobody gets in without presenting those options to me
and i would also organize the rest of the senior staff or court group, David Axelrod, Gibbs, et cetera, you know,
to see it and value it and scrub it because you cannot go in and dump your
problem on him. That's not fair. So that was one thing.
The other thing is you got to help the president evaluate all the options.
President Kennedy used to say to govern is to choose between bad and worse.
And the judgment you need is to figure out which one is bad and which one is worse.
There are arguably few worse situations for a president than taking office in the immediate
aftermath of a severe and dramatic economic downturn. Just weeks after Obama was sworn in
in 2009, he signed a $787 billion stimulus package, which was among the largest
spending bills in U.S. history. This came on the heels of his predecessor George Bush's
$700 billion TARP bill to bail out failing banks and other companies.
And Republicans are against both, even under Bush. So basically, within a blink of the eye
for the American people, you've approved $1.6 trillion.
And then we passed kids' health care, literally led better on pay equity and fairness, etc., some other things.
I was making a very strong case to the president that we should do financial reform.
The financial team, led by Tim Geithner, Larry Summers, etc., are against what I want.
Because they said the doubt of a long battle about financial reform would stop banks from lending and that would not let the economy recover. What did they want to do instead? It
wasn't what they wanted. It was what they didn't want to do. Okay. Now I made an argument to the
president. One, the political system needs some old Testament justice. We needed a banker in the
middle of the public square and just slap them silly. Two, because of the financial meltdown,
you were more likely to get a bipartisan vote, which both the TARP and stimulus bill did not
have. Third is you would fight with the bankers. Now, if you have to have an opponent, I'd like
bankers. I thought culturally, politically holding the bankers and the financial industries' feet to the fire and reforming the system would both garner bipartisanship and be a sense to the public, the middle class, that we're still, their homes are underwater.
It would be somewhat of a catharsis that somebody upstairs was being held accountable.
To President Obama's great credit, we had a four-hour Saturday Roosevelt room
discussion. I lost the fight. He made his decision, healthcare first. But what I loved about both
President Clinton and President Obama is you were never scared to disagree with them.
But once a decision was made, you enforce that decision. President Obama, I gave him advice on
financial reform, lose that battle. He decides healthcare. I've been through this movie before, it doesn't look pretty. I said, okay, if this is what we're going to do, fine. I told him advice on financial reform. Lose that battle. He decides healthcare. I've been through this movie before.
It doesn't look pretty.
I said, okay, if this is what we're going to do, fine.
I told him up front, you will pass nothing else when you're done.
Kaput.
Because this is not one that gets money back in the account.
You're taking it all out.
He made that decision.
The president wanted it done.
Now, did I chase members down, including working out at the gym and being very clear to
them how they were going to vote? Yeah. I have no bones about it. Going back to financial reform,
as an outsider at that same time watching, I was stunned at how the economists in the
administration were just willing to do anything. They were so worried, it seemed, about being held personally responsible
for the next Great Depression that they just didn't kind of care, another 500 billion.
And I challenged some of them later and I said, you know, as a public servant, shouldn't you have
been trying to maximize expected value for society or something, not worrying about your own reputation?
And it was kind of like they hadn't thought about that before. And then they changed their tune dramatically after
that, said, no, no, it wasn't about our reputation. It was uncertainty and da, da, da.
So I think we're on the 12-year anniversary of the financial bailout.
That was really good policy. It saved the country from a depression, plus the stimulus bill,
the two of them combined. Two of the worst political decisions you could ever make. And those two, one-two punch, saved the economy from a depression.
So we have argued on this podcast that the president is not nearly as important as people
think the president is, has much less actual power. The decisions matter less.
You pretty much disagreed with everything I've said so far.
Do you disagree with that as well?
Yeah.
So you think the president is actually really important?
So, yes, big time.
If I had known this, I never would have come on this podcast.
Who vetted this decision?
So I think presidential decisions are major.
Otherwise, I wasted a lot of time giving sound advice.
So you speak very reverentially about Clinton, and I can't tell whether you feel the same about Obama or not.
Really?
I think they're both great presidents.
No, no, no.
Opposite.
I suppose if there's a slight tinge.
You know, I used to say to my mother, you love Ezekiel more than me.
She goes, no, I hate you both equally.
So let me say this.
A, I spent more time with President Clinton. B, it's in my formative political years. I revere President
Obama. And, you know, we're closer in age. We're good friends. We have a personal relationship.
But it was just at a different point in my life. And that's why. Let me just be really clear.
If I left any doubt, that's bad on me.
Coming up after the break, Rahm Emanuel ponders the central tradeoff of this difficult time that we find ourselves in.
Public health is dependent on separation and segregation.
The economy is built on a premise of integration and interdependence.
That's right after this.
Hey there, I'm Steve Levitt, Stephen Dubner's Freakonomics friend and co-author.
I'm the economics part of that title.
We started this podcast in 2010, mostly as a side project to the books.
A decade later, we're expanding the Freakonomics radio universe with a few spinoff shows,
including perhaps one very much like this, with me interviewing smart people,
especially unconventional thinkers in all sorts of fields. But we need your feedback.
Email us at radio at Freakonomics.com., back to my interview with Rahm Emanuel.
A long time ago, Steve Dubner wrote a piece about me in the New York Times,
that I was this brilliant guy, and when there was some problem,
I'd scratch my head, I'd type in the computer,
and some brilliant solution would pop out.
I've been able to milk that for the last 20 years,
and it's really been helpful.
You have a reputation as being ruthless and foul-mouthed and a tyrant.
So to what extent is that sort of a fake thing you've cultivated? To what extent do you think it's helpful? Well, first of all, I don't care. I mean, here's my thing. I am tough for the things
I believe in. One, you should know, all my staff, still people that worked for me when I was
President Clinton's senior advisor, stay in touch with me and ask me to be references for their jobs, et cetera.
Now, if all I was was a screamer, would that be possible?
We're all more complicated than described.
I actually think journalists, unfortunately, for speed, time, et cetera, you know, did
I send somebody a dead fish?
Yes, I did it.
And I'm not proud of what I did.
And I would do it again. I wouldn't do it again not proud of what I did. And I would do it again.
I wouldn't do it again at this point in my life, but I would do it again at that point in my life.
So, you know, look, am I tough?
Yeah.
Am I passionate?
Yes.
Am I a caring person who reaches out to people who years ago worked for me for all the screaming and yelling that, quote, unquote, I only do?
That's all I do.
I only have one tool in my toolbox. That's it. Really? Now, is it out there? Does it work for
me sometimes? Sure. But like update your metaphors, man. I'd sent the dead fish close to 30 years ago.
Okay. But to you, I want to congratulate you taking one article and making all the money
you did off of that one article.
So you probably don't remember, but the first time we ever met in person was when you had decided to run for mayor. We talked for a few minutes and I said, you can't seriously want
this job. The mayor of Chicago right now is the worst job in the world. The city finances are in
shambles. Pensions are unfunded and the crime. And you probably
remember your answer, but your whole demeanor changed and you got very quiet and like, not
like you're like a teary guy or anything, but you said, I love Chicago and I'm the only guy
who can save Chicago. I said, I'm the only guy. Yeah, you said that. And really struck me because I'd never met you, obviously, but I'd heard so many stories about, you know, how ruthless you were.
And at that moment, like either great acting or like a really genuine sense that you were doing things.
Either authentic or faking the authenticity.
So you come and you win and you serve two terms as mayor.
And now you've written a book
about mayors look the introduction is about my grandfather's journey from eastern europe and
fleeing the pogroms of eastern europe to come to a city as a 10 year old and this city
um made our family and i do believe it's the most livable big city in America. It's the quintessential American city. And it's the
city that welcomed not only my grandfather, but my father. And we put our roots down here. So
it's home. And you have, Steve, I think some old shoes you refuse to throw away, right?
And when I went to college, I immediately came home. When I left the Clinton White House,
I immediately came home. When I left President Obama's side, I immediately came home. When I left the Clinton White House, I immediately came home. When I left President Obama's side,
I immediately came home.
And so this is home.
And the book is about, you know,
the center of gravity of our politics.
We've had these fluxes between national versus local.
We're in the beginning of what I think
is a major local breadth or center of gravity
and a diminished role for national.
That's also true in Brussels, in London, et cetera.
When you think about the way you work, where you work, how you get to work,
where you raise your kids, et cetera, the amenities of your neighborhood and community,
schools, transportation, libraries, parks, all of those are services your local government gives,
which is why 75% of the public believe in their local government, but only in the 20s for national.
The national government's becoming more and more like Disneyland on the Potomac.
What's different this time also is that local governments are, A, mastering the schools, the transportation, the libraries, the parks, and these investments that are key for the vitality of their city and their residents. And they have to do it, one,
because the national government's walking away. Two, they don't have the option of standing still.
They have to make these investments. Just take education. Lyndon Johnson, at the height of the
belief in the federal government, he creates Head Start. Cities are burning, people are fleeing,
and he gives mayors
some money for early childhood education. And it's to help mayors who can't get it together.
Fast forward 50 years later, President Obama, working with John Boehner, the Speaker of the
House of Republican, who used to be the Chairman of the Education Committee, tries to create
universal full-day pre-K for early childhood education. Can't get it done. So rather than
take no for an answer, he pulls together 200 mayors and says, look education. Can't get it done. So rather than take no for an answer,
he pulls together 200 mayors and says, look, I can't get this done at the national level,
but you guys are the only ones that can put some points on the board. And you go to New York,
go to Chicago, go to Boston, go to San Antonio, go across the country. Mayors are now finding the
local resources for universal full-day pre-K. The need hadn't disappeared. The government entity that could provide that new service did.
Now, Chicago, on the other side of the educational equation,
we were the first city to create, with Chicago Star Scholarship,
free community college tuition, books, and transportation
if you got a B average in high school.
No federal government, no state government, nothing.
They've never even called, even though 8,000 kids have gone through it.
81% of that 8,000 are the first ones in their family to go to college.
Boston's copied it.
Denver's copied it.
San Francisco's copied it.
Oakland's copied it.
But nobody expects Washington will do anything about this.
What I admire about what you did in education was you were incredibly pragmatic.
You looked at the situation, you said the school day in Chicago and the school year is short.
The kids are getting something like two or three less years of education over 12 years.
And you did what Clinton taught you to do, which was to fight doggedly at whatever cost with the end in mind and succeeded in doing that.
I would not be sitting here across from you if it wasn't for two things, the love of my parents and
a good education. And in government, you can affect one, you can't affect the other.
So I believed in that and I made a pledge in the campaign of 2011 that our kids in Chicago had the shortest school day in
the shortest school year in the United States of America. That is an unbelievable condemnation.
So before I was mayor, even I was mayor elect, I changed the law. So time was not in a contract
negotiation in cooperation with the teachers union. And remember, 84% of the children that
go to the Chicago public schools are from poverty or below. If you were starting with a blank sheet and you want to end the cycle
of poverty, would you draft a five and a half hour day? So that was one. And then two, that same
negotiation in 2012, we ended up producing the resources for full day kindergarten for every
child. So I've studied education for a long time. And in the end, I got discouraged because I actually think that we are asking too much of our schools because
absent not just the love of the parent, but the focus on education of the parent and whatnot,
I think sometimes we think the schools are somehow going to make up for deficits that they can't. So
I'm a big believer in education, but I also think that people should be realistic.
First of all, you're right and wrong.
The whole debate, which is what drives me crazy, no one teacher for 45, 50 minutes can push back against all the social, economic, cultural deficits that walk into that room.
It's impossible.
Impossible. Now, the principal creates the
culture in that building, and it needs the entire building, not one room out of that building to
work. Number three, we're going to have to be honest. Parents play a role in the child's
education. And we do have to ask our schools to take on more responsibility, especially for kids of poverty, because not every parent has the agency that Steve and Ram have and our partners, let's be clear, to deal with the education of a child.
And so the discussion should be fulsome.
Think about it as a parent and then back up all the things Steve and Ram, Amy, I don't know your spouse's name, we do. And then what are the
policies we can do that allow a child who doesn't grow up in the Emanuel rule home have the same
opportunities, the same capacities. And if you then put those in place, look, one statistic to
illustrate this point. In the United States, 44% of all high school kids go to college. In Chicago,
it's 44%. We don't have the same completion rate, but we do have the same acceptance rate and attendance rate.
Everything that would say, not that child, not that zip code, not that income, not that race, not that gender.
We have proven the cynics wrong.
Do we have challenges?
Absolutely.
Are we done?
No.
But to you that are depressed but are passionate about studying it, I would tell you it can be done.
You'll get your head beated.
I was 6'2 when I started this job.
I'm 5'8 now.
But you can do it.
It can be done.
So it's not that you're saying that the city or the mayor is necessarily the right way to get things done.
You're saying with the current dysfunction of the federal level, we're just completely screwed unless the mayor step in and do this.
Is that the right way to think about it? Well, I would love a federal partner.
I don't want to do this on my own.
You don't have an option as a mayor to wait. And I think when you look at it, if you think the federal
government is distant, your local government is pretty, I mean, you said before I ran, you and I
had a conversation, pretty intimate. The economy is global. We're seeing it right now with the
virus, but all politics is local. And I think the residents want a government that they can influence, that influences their
lives. And that's more local than it is national. And why do you think the mayors are becoming more
important now? You think there's more talent flowing into that job? Without a doubt. Just
take politics nationally right now. So Mayor Pete wins Iowa in New Hampshire. Joe Biden runs this ad ridiculing streetlights, cobblestones when I'm dealing with Iran and
health care.
And people go, well, I don't know, streetlights and cobblestones sound pretty good to me.
That would be like, as the governor of Michigan said, just pave the damn roads.
If you feel so alienated from your government, what is the one political government that still has
legitimacy to say X or Y? And that's your local government and your local government official.
And I think mayors today, for a host of reasons of leading the efforts on education,
leading the efforts on infrastructure investment, leading the efforts on quality of life,
all the things that touch your life is your local government.
Yeah, that's true. And I have to say, I was highly skeptical of your premise when I started
reading the book, but it was surprisingly persuasive.
So I walked in with a C and got a B minus.
I mean, it's an unusual book in a lot of ways. It's part memoir.
It's part policy, wonkish or deep thinking.
So I describe it as a third political science, a third of rethinking urban policy and politics.
And as you remember, Winston Churchill, towards the end of his tenure, they said, how do you think history would treat you?
And he goes, very well, I plan on writing it.
I would say one of the most surprising things I've observed is the liveliness of cities.
I mean, 30, 40 years ago, cities were dying.
I mean, it was like everything was going against some crime, poor financing, bad schools, and technology, which was making it less and less important that people be face-to-face.
And who would have ever predicted the turnaround?
My dad and mom left UNL. I was in fourth, fifth grade. We moved to the suburbs.
That's not happening today. All the things that drove you out are driving you back in.
And so that's a pretty unique social, cultural, economic alteration.
So what do you think happened? Because it's something I think about a lot.
How did that happen?
My own pet theory, probably wrong,
but my own theory is that it's not just about jobs,
but stuff has just gotten so cheap, right?
So it used to be like when we were kids
and the TV broke, it was a big deal.
But now a TV broke, so you like buy a new one.
You just watch it on your telephone.
So I think stuff got so cheap.
And as people got richer, services became much more important in terms of the way people consume.
And the cities are the only place to get those kind of services that people want.
And that, I think, has been really important.
A lot of people want the services or the benefits that come with city living.
The lakefront, the museums, the theater,
the restaurants, the bars,
in the same proximity of work.
And that's put pressure on cities to improve schools,
improve their public transportation,
improve their parks, their access,
what parks offered.
And I'm proud of this as a former ballet dancer
for a hundred reasons.
We came up with this thing called Night Out in the Park,
which was cultural attractions in our parks from Shakespeare Theater to Joffrey Ballet
to the Chicago Symphony. You know, if a family wanted those amenities,
they're like out of reach, even for a middle to upper middle class family. And so making sure
that you could still have culture and all those things accessible and affordable.
And then there's a massive race across the globe that will never slow up for talent.
And Chicago has an incredible institutional strength in this.
GE Healthcare left London for Chicago.
And McDonald's, years ago, left for the suburbs,
realized that they can't find the talent they need staying where they are, the campus structure they have,
the university they have,
and they took it here to Chicago.
Now, there are other things you've got to do
to make sure that everybody's a winner at that,
not just some people.
But companies are chasing talent,
and where you have talent, you'll have success.
These days, Emanuel is a contributor for ABC News and an
advisor for Centerview Partners, an investment bank. Given his lengthy experience in public
service, I wanted to ask him one more question about how history will view the COVID-19 crisis.
Is this going to be seen as a blip? Is this going to be seen as fundamental?
No, no, no. History will see this as a pivotal point where not only are we globally interdependent,
but we're going to start to try to find ways to unlock that interdependence. I don't think our
supply chain 10 years from now will look like it is today. We are not going to be this reliant on
China for medical supplies, pharmaceutical supplies. Just won't happen. And public health is dependent on separation and segregation.
The economy is built on a premise of integration and interdependence.
Those two principles are in conflict right now. And we have to figure out how they can't be in
conflict, but more collaborative and cooperative. We're going to have future pandemics,
and we're not going to be able to survive as a society
where you're picking one or the other.
Those are wise words, Ram,
and I hope that we won't let this crisis go to waste.
Can I say, people, the quote was,
never allow a good crisis to go to waste.
It's the opportunity to do the things you never thought possible and make them possible.
And so the emphasis was always not having a good crisis, not letting it go to waste,
but what are you going to do that you thought, oh, I would love to do that, but I can't for
these 20 reasons.
The impetus then is to identify what are the key things in that crisis that have to get
prepared for then the future.
And that maybe makes us all, to quote you, better data scientists.
That was former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel in conversation with Steve Levitt in a special bonus episode.
We'd love to hear your feedback at radio at Freakonomics.com,
as well as suggestions for Levitt's future interview subjects on his new podcast.
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