The Left Owes a Lot to Jesse Jackson

One of the most famous photographs of Martin Luther King Jr shows him standing on the balcony at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee, with three of his top aides — Ralph Abernathy, Hosea Williams, and Jesse Jackson. The next night, April 4, 1968, on that same balcony, King was murdered. Jackson was one of several staffers with King at the hotel.

Jackson had been drawn into King’s inner circle at a young age. After King’s death, some activists considered Jackson to be the slain leader’s heir apparent, although others considered Jackson too young, inexperienced, and brash to assume King’s mantle. By the 1970s, however, Jackson had become the nation’s most visible civil rights leader. By the time he ran for president in 1984 and 1988, he had transcended the “civil rights” label to become the most visible progressive leader in the country, with a racially and economically diverse following that he called a “rainbow coalition.”

Twenty years later, in 2008, another photo of Jackson symbolized the long journey that Jackson, and the nation, had taken. It showed Jackson standing in Chicago’s Grant Park, holding a small American flag, with tears in his eyes, as he listened to Barack Obama speak to a huge crowd on the night he was elected president of the United States. The photo did not require a caption. Jackson had clearly paved the way for Obama’s victory.

Eight years after that, then again four years later, Sen. Bernie Sanders — a longtime supporter of Jackson’s dating back to the Vermont socialist’s days as mayor of Burlington — would take up the mantle of Jackson’s mission in his own transformative presidential campaigns.

Bernie Sanders’s two presidential campaigns owed a great deal to Jesse Jackson. (Scott Olson / Getty Images)

In the forty years that separated King’s assassination and Obama’s election, and the half century separating that assassination and Bernie’s two presidential runs, Jackson, who died on Monday at…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Peter Dreier

Pour l’actu indépendante

🌍 Soutenez l’info libre. Gardez OnePlanète vivant et sans pub
→ ko-fi.com/oneplanetecom

Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com