Rahm Emanuel is pitching a proposal to steer some departing U.S. service members into registered apprenticeships in the skilled trades, including a cash bonus for participants, as he continues a series of policy rollouts that have fueled speculation about his political ambitions.
Rahm Emanuel, the former Chicago mayor and former U.S. ambassador to Japan, is continuing a recent streak of policy proposals as allies and observers speculate about whether he may seek higher office in 2028.
Over a three-day visit to Michigan, Emanuel is promoting a plan aimed at easing the transition from military to civilian life by encouraging participation in registered apprenticeships for skilled trades such as electrical work, carpentry, plumbing and construction-related occupations.
Under the proposal, Emanuel says 20,000 departing service members would receive a $10,000 tax-free bonus if they enroll in a registered apprenticeship program. The initiative, he estimates, would cost about $200 million over five years.
In interviews, Emanuel framed the plan as part of a broader push to expand career pathways beyond four-year college degrees.
Emanuel has recently floated other ideas that have drawn attention, including a proposal to set a mandatory retirement age of 75 for federal officeholders and judges. He has also discussed other education- and youth-related initiatives, though details and timelines for some of those proposals have varied across his public appearances.
Emanuel has argued that the country faces a shortage of workers in the skilled trades. Ford Motor Co. CEO Jim Farley has made similar warnings publicly, saying there are more than 1 million unfilled jobs in what he calls the "essential economy," including trades and other critical roles.
Emanuel has also pointed to conversations with technology leaders about the resilience of hands-on jobs against automation, arguing that many skilled-trades roles are less susceptible to being displaced by artificial intelligence than some white-collar work.
Emanuel has not announced any campaign plans. But he has said he intends to keep laying out policy ideas that, in his view, respond to voters’ concerns while Democrats also confront President Donald Trump’s agenda and political dominance within the Republican Party.