Jesse Jackson, a Baptist clergyman and prominent figure in civil rights, has passed away at the age of 84. He was known for his two pioneering yet ultimately unsuccessful campaigns for the Democratic presidential candidacy.
A declaration from his relatives formally announced Jackson’s passing.
It stated, “His steadfast dedication to fairness, parity, and fundamental human rights played a pivotal role in shaping a worldwide movement for emancipation and dignity. He amplified the voices of the marginalized—from his presidential endeavors in the 1980s to galvanizing millions to register for voting—leaving an enduring impact on history.”
Jackson was born in 1941 in Greenville, South Carolina, a region then marked by segregation. He subsequently earned his degree from North Carolina A&T State University, an institution traditionally serving Black students, in 1964.
He rapidly engaged with the civil rights struggle, notably participating in the marches from Selma to Montgomery in Alabama. He emerged as one of several protégés of Martin Luther King Jr., the movement’s iconic leader.
King himself enlisted Jackson for a role in his Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the body that spearheaded peaceful demonstrations against racial separation. King also entrusted Jackson with leading Operation Breadbasket—an initiative designed to compel corporations, through methods including boycotts, to employ more Black individuals in Chicago, Jackson’s adopted hometown.
Jackson’s standing within the civil rights movement significantly ascended due to his proximity to King at the moment of his assassination in 1968. Jackson accompanied King on his ill-fated visit to address sanitation workers in Memphis, Tennessee, shortly before King was gunned down at the Lorraine Motel.
“Each time the old wound is uncovered, it still feels fresh,” Jackson conveyed to Scripps News in 2018, reflecting on the tragic event.
By 1971, Jackson had inaugurated Push—initially recognized as People United to Save Humanity—with the aim of enhancing economic prospects for Black communities. This occurred even as the broader civil rights campaign struggled to regain momentum after King’s killing, with Richard Nixon occupying the Oval Office.
In 1984, as his influence burgeoned, Jackson independently established the National Rainbow Coalition. Its mission was to advocate for voting privileges and social equity for a broader spectrum of progressive factions and minority groups.
Jackson was a vocal adversary of Ronald Reagan’s financial strategies, contending that their blend of tax reductions and deregulation exacerbated inequality across the U.S. These two organizations would later merge in 1996 to form the Rainbow-Push coalition, which Jackson chaired until his demise.
As Jackson’s activism broadened, so did his political aspirations. In 1983, he initiated a nationwide campaign for the U.S. presidency, thereby becoming the first Black man to be a leading contender for a major party’s nomination, and only the second African-American after Shirley Chisholm’s candidacy in 1972.
In the 1984 electoral contest, Jackson competed against Walter Mondale, the former vice-president hailing from Minnesota, and Gary Hart, a senator representing Colorado. Jackson did not come close to securing the nomination—which was ultimately awarded to Mondale—yet he garnered over 3 million votes in the primary process, accounting for nearly 20 percent of the ballots cast.
“America is not akin to a single blanket—a continuous fabric, uniform in hue, texture, and dimension. America more closely resembles a quilt: numerous patches, many fragments, diverse shades, varied proportions, all interconnected and bound by a shared thread,” Jackson declared at the 1984 Democratic convention. “Even in our fragmented condition, each of us matters and belongs somewhere.”
Four years subsequent, in 1988, Jackson drew even nearer to the nation’s highest office. He captured over 29 percent of the primary votes, accumulating almost 7 million supporters, before being narrowly surpassed by Michael Dukakis for the Democratic Party’s nomination.

Jackson did not pursue the presidency again, but he maintained his position as one of the Democratic party’s most influential voices for many years, spanning the administrations of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.
Jackson’s rapport with Clinton began with some friction. During the 1992 campaign, the prospective Democratic president utilized a speech at the National Rainbow Coalition to criticize the rapper Sister Souljah for promoting anti-white sentiments and fostering racial divisions in America.
Jackson reacted sharply, asserting that Souljah “embodies the sentiments and aspirations of an entire generation of individuals.”
However, Jackson would eventually reconcile with Clinton—he was designated as a special envoy for promoting democracy in Africa and participated in several sensitive missions, such as securing the freedom of US prisoners of war from Slobodan Milosevic’s Yugoslavia.
During the Monica Lewinsky scandal, Jackson offered spiritual counsel to the first family. “One requires faith when adversities strike suddenly, so I truly spoke with Hillary and Chelsea regarding matters of belief and unconditional affection,” he remarked at that juncture.
In August 2000, mere months before vacating his position, Bill Clinton bestowed upon Jackson the presidential medal of freedom, marked by a heartfelt embrace at the White House.
“It is challenging to conceive how we could have progressed as far as we have without the inventive power, the sharp intellect, the compassionate heart, and the relentless drive of Jesse Louis Jackson,” Clinton remarked on that day. “And the Almighty is not yet finished with him.”

The 2008 electoral race would propel Obama to become America’s inaugural Black president, where Jackson himself had fallen short. “Today, our America is improved,” he conveyed to CBS the morning after displaying visible emotion while witnessing Obama’s triumph speech in Chicago’s Grant Park.
However, during the presidential contest, Jackson had not consistently been so magnanimous towards Obama. In July of that year, he was recorded on an active microphone grumbling that Obama was “lecturing Black individuals” and he desired to “emasculate him.”
Jackson offered an apology for the coarse and disparaging remarks. Jackson had collaborated with U.S. President Donald Trump in the 1990s on urban development initiatives, but Trump’s entry into the political arena filled Jackson with apprehension, dismay, and invoked some of history’s darkest periods.
“The notion of restoring America’s greatness reopens the wounds embedded in America’s immoral genesis, born in transgression, and formed in inequity,” he informed an audience at the University of Michigan in November 2016, shortly after Trump vanquished Hillary Clinton to secure his initial White House term.
“We must not for an instant underestimate the harm inflicted upon our nation . . . in recent days,” he added, continuing: “What challenge faces us? A struggle for America’s very essence is underway.”

