The Job of Being Jesse Jackson
Transparency shouldn't be controversial.
Log In
Email *
Password *
Remember Me
Forgot Your Password?
Log In
New to The Nation? Subscribe
Print subscriber? Activate your online access
Skip to content Skip to footer
The Job of Being Jesse Jackson
Magazine
Newsletters
Subscribe
Log In
Search
Subscribe
Donate
Magazine
Latest
Archive
Podcasts
Newsletters
Sections
Politics
World
Economy
Culture
Books & the Arts
The Nation
About
Events
Contact Us
Advertise
Current Issue
Activism
/ February 19, 2026
The Job of Being Jesse Jackson
Jackson’s lessons for today’s Democrats.
Bruce Shapiro
Share
Copy Link
Facebook
X (Twitter)
Bluesky Pocket
Email
Ad Policy
Reverend Jesse Jackson addresses supporters in the lead-up to the 1988 Iowa Democratic Presidential Caucuses, on February 1, 1988. (Jean-Louis Atlan / Sygma via Getty Images)
In 2000, I got to spend some intense hours with Jesse Jackson, when he and his son Jesse Jackson Jr., then in Congress, collaborated with me on a book about capital punishment. Commitments across the country kept the elder Jackson constantly on the road, so I would grab writing time with him in hotel rooms, airport lounges, breakfast joints.
It was the Bush-Gore presidential election year, and virtually every time I arrived Jesse was working the phone. I got to overhear a strikingly different style of persuasion from that of the stentorian public orator I’d intermittently covered. Jesse’s off-camera political voice was generally forbearing: quietly connecting, humorously cajoling, deal-making with the artful rhythm and grace of a choreographer. Jesse held in his head a map of the nationwide grassroots Democratic Party: Which clergy could turn out the church buses in East St. Louis? Which banker could arrange a campaign donation in Des Moines? Which union local could swing Maryland? Jesse knew all the players, knew the tone and the particular words that would stir each one to action. He was the great Democratic national chairman we never had.
Following Kamala Harris’s loss to Donald Trump, I thought often of Jesse’s relentlessly human-scale, ward-level organizing—especially when I looked at the 2024 election results in my own city of New Haven and realized just how dramatically Democratic turnout had fallen since 2020: another election lost, in the words of Jesse’s 1984 Democratic Convention speech, “by the margin of our despair.” Our present catastrophe is the sum total of tactics embraced by two generations of liberal campaign technocrats, their eyes on deep-pocket contributors and computer modeling, who willfully ignored the lessons of Jackson’s transformational and inclusive cross-class, cross-racial tree-shaking.
Jesse’s major-media obituaries make dutiful note of the complications and contradictions of his career. (The best assessment of much of the press coverage of his death can be found in Jesse’s own 1984 SNL opening monologue. Look it up.) But I’ve been thinking of the issues on which Jackson simply kept on keeping on, unshaken by shifts of political winds. One of them was capital punishment. By 2000, the Clinton administration had expanded the federal death penalty. Racially coded mandatory minimum sentences were …
Transparency shouldn't be controversial.
Log In
Email *
Password *
Remember Me
Forgot Your Password?
Log In
New to The Nation? Subscribe
Print subscriber? Activate your online access
Skip to content Skip to footer
The Job of Being Jesse Jackson
Magazine
Newsletters
Subscribe
Log In
Search
Subscribe
Donate
Magazine
Latest
Archive
Podcasts
Newsletters
Sections
Politics
World
Economy
Culture
Books & the Arts
The Nation
About
Events
Contact Us
Advertise
Current Issue
Activism
/ February 19, 2026
The Job of Being Jesse Jackson
Jackson’s lessons for today’s Democrats.
Bruce Shapiro
Share
Copy Link
X (Twitter)
Bluesky Pocket
Ad Policy
Reverend Jesse Jackson addresses supporters in the lead-up to the 1988 Iowa Democratic Presidential Caucuses, on February 1, 1988. (Jean-Louis Atlan / Sygma via Getty Images)
In 2000, I got to spend some intense hours with Jesse Jackson, when he and his son Jesse Jackson Jr., then in Congress, collaborated with me on a book about capital punishment. Commitments across the country kept the elder Jackson constantly on the road, so I would grab writing time with him in hotel rooms, airport lounges, breakfast joints.
It was the Bush-Gore presidential election year, and virtually every time I arrived Jesse was working the phone. I got to overhear a strikingly different style of persuasion from that of the stentorian public orator I’d intermittently covered. Jesse’s off-camera political voice was generally forbearing: quietly connecting, humorously cajoling, deal-making with the artful rhythm and grace of a choreographer. Jesse held in his head a map of the nationwide grassroots Democratic Party: Which clergy could turn out the church buses in East St. Louis? Which banker could arrange a campaign donation in Des Moines? Which union local could swing Maryland? Jesse knew all the players, knew the tone and the particular words that would stir each one to action. He was the great Democratic national chairman we never had.
Following Kamala Harris’s loss to Donald Trump, I thought often of Jesse’s relentlessly human-scale, ward-level organizing—especially when I looked at the 2024 election results in my own city of New Haven and realized just how dramatically Democratic turnout had fallen since 2020: another election lost, in the words of Jesse’s 1984 Democratic Convention speech, “by the margin of our despair.” Our present catastrophe is the sum total of tactics embraced by two generations of liberal campaign technocrats, their eyes on deep-pocket contributors and computer modeling, who willfully ignored the lessons of Jackson’s transformational and inclusive cross-class, cross-racial tree-shaking.
Jesse’s major-media obituaries make dutiful note of the complications and contradictions of his career. (The best assessment of much of the press coverage of his death can be found in Jesse’s own 1984 SNL opening monologue. Look it up.) But I’ve been thinking of the issues on which Jackson simply kept on keeping on, unshaken by shifts of political winds. One of them was capital punishment. By 2000, the Clinton administration had expanded the federal death penalty. Racially coded mandatory minimum sentences were …
The Job of Being Jesse Jackson
Transparency shouldn't be controversial.
Log In
Email *
Password *
Remember Me
Forgot Your Password?
Log In
New to The Nation? Subscribe
Print subscriber? Activate your online access
Skip to content Skip to footer
The Job of Being Jesse Jackson
Magazine
Newsletters
Subscribe
Log In
Search
Subscribe
Donate
Magazine
Latest
Archive
Podcasts
Newsletters
Sections
Politics
World
Economy
Culture
Books & the Arts
The Nation
About
Events
Contact Us
Advertise
Current Issue
Activism
/ February 19, 2026
The Job of Being Jesse Jackson
Jackson’s lessons for today’s Democrats.
Bruce Shapiro
Share
Copy Link
Facebook
X (Twitter)
Bluesky Pocket
Email
Ad Policy
Reverend Jesse Jackson addresses supporters in the lead-up to the 1988 Iowa Democratic Presidential Caucuses, on February 1, 1988. (Jean-Louis Atlan / Sygma via Getty Images)
In 2000, I got to spend some intense hours with Jesse Jackson, when he and his son Jesse Jackson Jr., then in Congress, collaborated with me on a book about capital punishment. Commitments across the country kept the elder Jackson constantly on the road, so I would grab writing time with him in hotel rooms, airport lounges, breakfast joints.
It was the Bush-Gore presidential election year, and virtually every time I arrived Jesse was working the phone. I got to overhear a strikingly different style of persuasion from that of the stentorian public orator I’d intermittently covered. Jesse’s off-camera political voice was generally forbearing: quietly connecting, humorously cajoling, deal-making with the artful rhythm and grace of a choreographer. Jesse held in his head a map of the nationwide grassroots Democratic Party: Which clergy could turn out the church buses in East St. Louis? Which banker could arrange a campaign donation in Des Moines? Which union local could swing Maryland? Jesse knew all the players, knew the tone and the particular words that would stir each one to action. He was the great Democratic national chairman we never had.
Following Kamala Harris’s loss to Donald Trump, I thought often of Jesse’s relentlessly human-scale, ward-level organizing—especially when I looked at the 2024 election results in my own city of New Haven and realized just how dramatically Democratic turnout had fallen since 2020: another election lost, in the words of Jesse’s 1984 Democratic Convention speech, “by the margin of our despair.” Our present catastrophe is the sum total of tactics embraced by two generations of liberal campaign technocrats, their eyes on deep-pocket contributors and computer modeling, who willfully ignored the lessons of Jackson’s transformational and inclusive cross-class, cross-racial tree-shaking.
Jesse’s major-media obituaries make dutiful note of the complications and contradictions of his career. (The best assessment of much of the press coverage of his death can be found in Jesse’s own 1984 SNL opening monologue. Look it up.) But I’ve been thinking of the issues on which Jackson simply kept on keeping on, unshaken by shifts of political winds. One of them was capital punishment. By 2000, the Clinton administration had expanded the federal death penalty. Racially coded mandatory minimum sentences were …
0 Comments
0 Shares
42 Views
0 Reviews