Comrades,
As most of you have probably seen, the Rev. Jesse Jackson passed away at the age of 84 on February 17, 2026. To remember and contextualize Jesse Jackson and his legacy, we share this conversation between Ajamu Baraka and Margaret Kimberley that Black Agenda Report published yesterday, Feb 18, 2026. Please take some time to read.
“Ajamu Baraka Remembers Rev. Jesse Jackson”
What is Jesse Jackson’s legacy? Ajamu Baraka, Black Agenda Report editor and columnist, provides his reflections.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson passed away at the age of 84 on February 17, 2026. A man who was literally at Martin Luther King’s side when he was assassinated also led Operation PUSH and the Rainbow Coalition and who ran for president in 1984 and 1988, has left quite a legacy. I will discuss that with Ajamu Baraka, Black Agenda Report editor and contributor.
Margaret Kimberley: Thanks for joining me, Ajamu.
Ajamu Baraka: My pleasure. Thank you.
MK: So there's so much we can say about Jesse Jackson and this is a big question, but I'm going to ask it anyway. What should we know about Jesse Jackson? How can you sum up his legacy?
AB: Well, I think that whenever we look at these personalities that emerged during the period of the Black liberation and so-called civil rights era, we have to always, in my opinion, contextualize these individuals. There would be no Dr. King or Jesse Jackson or any of them without the movement that emerged. And so Jesse was a product of that movement. Jesse, like many young people, decided that he was going to get involved in the struggle for what they defined as civil rights.
He was a young man from South Carolina who had a lot of potential. He was a very brilliant young man, as a matter of fact. And when he joined the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, his skills were quite obvious to people. And he gradually moved his way into the inner circle. He was sort of on the outer circle for a moment, but because he was young, energetic, he ended up in the inner circle. And so he wasn't just brought right into the leadership of the inner circles, but eventually, he was very, very close to the top leadership.
And we talk about the top leadership of SCLC, we're talking about not just Dr. King, but Ralph David Abernathy and the other lieutenants who were part of that brain trust people like Andy Young and others. So Jesse's skills emerged. He had a way, he had an ability to communicate, in particular, with young people. He was responsible for doing a lot of the student youth outreach in the early days, and eventually, especially after Dr. King was assassinated, Jesse took a program that he had been very much instrumental in developing, called Operation Bread Basket, which emerged as an element of the economic arm of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. That is where a lot of their money came through.
After Dr. King was assassinated, he made a move to basically control that program, and he, in essence, sort of took it out of SCLC when he moved to Chicago and began to run Operation Breadbasket. And then from there, he then developed Operation PUSH, because there was some pushback from the SCLC. And the rest is kind of history, in a way, in terms of him developing this strategy of how to support the expansion of Black businesses. His positions on various civil rights issues that were still unfolding, his ability to articulate positions quickly translated into him becoming a very prominent spokesperson and personality in the civil rights movement.
MK: And you had a professional connection with him. Can you talk about that?
AB: As people know Jesse ran for the Democratic nomination for president twice. First one was for 1984 and at that time, I was developing an organization called the Progressive Black Student Alliance, and we ended up splitting around the question of support for this presidential run and in 1983 going into 1984 I was opposed to it. I thought it was a diversion, and I didn't think it was going to be a serious run, and that Jesse was mainly just going to, we didn't call it at that time, sheepdogging, but in essence, that's what I thought it was going to be, and so I opposed it. But by 1987 conditions had shifted somewhat, and I believed at that point that there was a possibility of Jesse and his run providing a sort of a material base, if you will, with the Rainbow Coalition that could end up helping to separate Black people from the Democrat Party, because the push then was if you're going to participate in the electoral process, once you do it as an independent, and not just have your wagon hitched to the Democrats, and we believed, I believed, and a few others, that with the Rainbow Coalition, and with our assessment that no matter how strong Jesse might be in the Democrat party primaries, that the Democrat Party was not prepared to hand the nomination to a Black man, and that, depending on our understanding of Jesse and his ego, that that might be the impetus for Jesse to walk Black people outside of the party.
So my participation in 1988 was strategic. I worked for his nonprofit arm, the Citizenship Education Fund, which was responsible for voter registration and get out to vote for the primaries. I was a state coordinator in Georgia, and along with a few others who sort of infiltrated, if you will, that process, we ended up in positions of leadership on the state level across the south, and we basically delivered Jesse, and delivered more than 7 million votes for Jesse across the primaries, in the Democrat Party process, with the idea that with that base of support going into the convention in 1988 in Atlanta, that at minimum, Jesse should be on the ticket as the Vice President, and again, depending on our historic understanding of the Democratic Party, that wasn't going to happen.
And so we went into the convention in 1988 and this is when I saw another side of Jesse. You see up to that time, Margaret having a chance to work directly with Jesse, I saw some very interesting things people don't remember or don't know how dynamic this young African really was. One thing that first hit me was being in these high level meetings and all these powerful white folks that, up until that time, I had just seen on television, who seemed to have all this white power, if you will, I've discovered that when Jesse Jackson will come into a room, there would be absolutely no question of who the leader was. He was just that kind of dynamic personality, and that I found to be very, very interesting. But you know, Jesse has some flaws, and so going into Atlanta with this base of support, 7 million votes up to that time were the highest number of votes ever received in a Democratic primary, but of course, Dukakis had more. So there were records set on both levels. We thought that Jesse would wield that power that he had.
But I watched Jesse, basically, unfortunately, sort of not understanding the historical moment, and in essence, because he was more concerned with trying to get a Democrat elected, allowed himself to take a deal, if you will, that he would not disrupt the convention, something that many of us came to the convention to do, and in fact there was some disruptions. He sold out and pledged he would not contest because his thinking was that if he was on the ticket that would enhance the Republican candidate. So he did not force himself on the ticket, and instead was promised a certain amount of money and access to a plane to basically go around the country to get out the vote activity on behalf of the Dukakis campaign. So yes, that was my relationship with Jesse at that point. I watched Jesse systematically dismantle the Rainbow Coalition coming out of the convention, and as a consequence, I believe, of doing that, that he undermined his potentiality in terms of really being able to influence national electoral politics in 1992, where one would think that Jesse would be the automatic frontrunner in the Democrat party. This was where he was when he cut a deal with the Clintons to allow Clinton to emerge as the nominee. And that, I think, was the kiss of death for Jesse's influence on the national level. You may remember that most people who weren't around might not remember the whole Sister Souljah episode.
MK: I'm old enough to remember the Sister Soulja moment, but tell us about that.
AB: When there was an event that Jesse organized. I think it was a PUSH event, and they invited Bill Clinton. And so what Bill did, because there was sort of rumblings that Bill was not prepared to really put Jesse in his place. Meaning, basically, Bill had to demonstrate he knew how to handle Black folks. And so he gave a speech in which he attacked Sister Souljah who, at that time was a young activist, very popular and very “militant,” if you will. And so in Jesse's house at the PUSH event, it was said that he basically attempted to humiliate Jesse in order to demonstrate to his white supporters that he was not afraid of and knew how to handle Black folks and be able to put them in their place. So that was like the culmination of what people needed to see in order to get completely behind Bill Clinton.
MK: Yes, I remember that he misquoted Sister Souljah, a comment she made. He gave the impression that she said Black people should kill white people, or something like that. It was a lie. He twisted her words, and Jesse Jackson, of course, had been sucker punched, and he just sat there and took it, but it was a terrible moment, and told us a lot about Bill Clinton and what we could expect from him. But I also think that this moment was pivotal for Jackson. Am I correct?
AB: I think it was, I mean, in the sense that it was, it demonstrated the length that he would take in his loyalty to the Democrat party and that and with the Rainbow Coalition just about eviscerated at that moment, his base had narrowed significantly. Of course, he still had his base in Chicago, he still was a very important instrument that was used by the still expanding new Black petty bourgeois and bourgeoisie. Jesse was the one that people would get in contact with who would go into these corporate headquarters and basically bully them into coming up with so-called agreements that forced them to hire more Black folks into executive positions or to provide direct contracts to Black businesses, sometimes both. So he became one of the most effective shakedown artists, some people might argue in the country, and something that as a consequence, many, many members of this expanding new class were very much beholden to their positions based on what Jesse did for them.
Remember now this is the period still of Black folks who captured these local elected offices of mayors and other places where they were in a position to have set asides and all of this. So this was still a very important era, even after the Ronald Reagan era, of still expanding class politics in terms of an expanding petty bourgeoisie and an expanding bourgeoisie. Now we didn't talk about great numbers, but significant numbers in terms of the roles that they were playing in providing a rationale, a justification for believing in the possibilities of the system, a very, very important role.
MK: You mentioned this phrase sheepdogging and our own Bruce Dixon used that phrase regarding Bernie Sanders, and you said you were concerned Jesse Jackson would do the same thing. And you turned out to be right. What does this mean about politics, electoral politics in the US? Is running as a Democrat always going to end up being sheepdogging for those on the left, said to be progressive or left, can we assume that that is always going to end up as sheepdogging for that party?
AB: You know, Margaret, that's a very important and complicated question. I take a nuanced position on that and not a blanket one. That is to say that because of the monopoly of these two parties, and the fact of the matter is that we have elections on every level of government, from the national down to the very local, that it really depends on the strategy that is deployed. For example, I still believe that there have been opportunities. We've seen places like Jackson, Mississippi, with the election of Chokwe Lumumba, in which there was an opportunity, or that created an opportunity for progressive forces, very progressive forces, as a matter of fact, to be able to take charge of this third tier city in Jackson, Mississippi.
And the strategy was basically to provide just sort of base, if you will, to consolidate some degree of power to be able to address some of the material contradictions that the local Black community face and others face there in Jackson. And so it really depends, for me, on a case by case basis. If you have a principled position, if you have a grassroots movement in which participating in this bourgeois electoral process, which is one aspect of a broader strategy that you are involved in, then basically, you know, I come from a tradition that says that we contest in various spaces, and we contest where the masses are, and that the biggest challenge that we have is getting access to the masses, to large numbers of the people. If the people are participating in the electoral process, then we have a responsibility to, in fact, engage that to the and contest it to the extent that we can. So, you know, I have a nuanced position,
I think it is a questionable position to basically just to deny any importance to participating in this bourgeois process. Of course, you always have that possibility of corruption, being corrupted, co-opted. Okay, there's no question about that. But again, it depends on the particular organizations. And when I say organizations, meaning that the participation has to come from the bottom up, from an organized process, and not these candidate centered kinds of campaigns. If you have a petty bourgeois person who wants to run for office that he goes to the masses saying, “Elect me and I’lll set you free,” that’s not what I'm talking about. We have to be, and should be, very suspicious of those kinds of individuals, especially when you understand the kind of money that has been raised in order to run for elected office.
So these are some of the questions though, Margaret that the whole Jesse phenomenon sparked, and I would argue that what was happening in the 1980s was a new dispensation of power and strategy in terms of how one confronts and deals with the state that basically the full consequence of the intensive counter revolutionary politics that emerged in the 1970s directed at the Black community had not really completely taken hold yet. There were still questions around what type of formation should we be attempting to build independent Black organizations that will contest in the electoral process or not contest. Should the focus be on the national level, or should it be strictly the local level? These are all the kinds of things that we were still somewhat debating in the 1980s.
And interestingly enough that debate was also taking place on the “right,” and what the right had determined was that, in order to consolidate and expand their control over the state, that they were going to engage in a similar kind of process. As a matter of fact, I argue that the kind of bottom up politics that Jesse articulated even more specifically in 1987 and 1988, building from the bottom up, contesting city councils, the boards of education, regulatory boards, etc., is exactly what the right was engaged in. And I know that to be a fact Margaret, because at that point, too, in the 1980s I was working with the last of the institutions that came out of the Mississippi Freedom Summer project that would, that is the Southern based voter education project. And our responsibility was developing and organizing in rural Black communities where the people are still contesting the electrical local electoral processes, training candidates, helping people to understand how to fundraise, etc.
And while we were doing that with very meager resources, we are watching the political right with enormous resources doing the same, culminating, in my opinion, and when they finally consolidated using all kinds of innovative techniques with direct mail at that time, and they emerged in 1994 with Newt Gingrich and so-called Contract with America. Some of us said it was a contract on America, but they had consolidated themselves, and through that consolidated power, that's when putting pressure on the Bill Clinton forces, and with the capitulation of the Democratic Leadership Council, the right wing of the Democrat Party, that's when they began to put into place all of these fundamental changes in terms of legislation, including the Crime Bill, the legislation that made it very difficult to take the authorities to court with prisons. That's when, of course, we remember, that was the attack on so called welfare as we knew it. So this, coalition, if you will, this convergence of right wing politics represented by the Gingrich forces and the Democratic Leadership Council is the one that helped shape the politics in the 1990s and with the collapse of the Soviet Union, that's why you had [Francis] Fukuyama and others, saying that we had arrived at the “end of history,” that basically the liberal, bourgeois, capitalist project had won out. So yes, all of these things were connected to one another.
The one thing that we can say to this with the separation between a Jesse Jackson and a charlatan like an Al Sharpton, that Jesse was a traditional liberal, no question about that, at a time where even the Congressional Black Caucus had a liberal radical politics, and part of that orientation, it manifested itself in taking critical positions vis a vis US imperialism. The Congressional Black Caucus were champions of African liberation, the anti apartheid movement, the situation in Haiti, but this crop of opportunist Negroes who are seen as so called Black leadership, if you will, they are right wingers, including Al Sharpton, that basically they don't have any critical analysis, any critical positions, vis a vis the immorality, the barbarity of US imperialist policies.
So there's no voices to defend the processes in Haiti anymore. There's no voices criticizing the continuation of a US presence on the African continent. There's no voices opposing the gangsterism in Venezuela and the impact it will have, not only on the Venezuelan people, but what about the Afro Venezuelans that people forget about, same thing with this siege now being imposed on Cuba. The current moment, I think, reflects the rightist character of Black politics in the US. And it's important for people to understand that even Jesse Jackson, and many people will point to, you know, some of the obvious contradictions that at least that tradition that he came out of was a tradition that was way further to the left than the current position of these criminals like Al Sharpton, Hakeem Jeffries, Gregory Meeks and the rest of these opportunists. It's important to make that distinction, I believe.
MK: Thank you. Thank you very much. Ajamu
AB: My pleasure.