Jesse Jackson, civil rights leader, dies at 84
EDITOR’S NOTE: This article has been edited for length.
(RNS)—The Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., a longtime civil rights activist who twice vied for the Democratic presidential nomination in the 1980s, died Feb. 17 at age 84.
A protégé of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Jackson was the founder of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, a social justice organization, but he intertwined his advocacy with politics and diplomacy, serving as a special envoy to Africa for the Clinton administration and as a shadow senator representing Washington, D.C., in the 1990s.
Before ill health prevented him, Jackson continued to appear on the front lines of causes for which he was long an advocate. In the summer of 2021, he was arrested twice outside the U.S. Senate at rallies urging passage of voting rights legislation, led by the Poor People’s Campaign, a revival of King’s anti-poverty movement.
As he had for decades, Jackson led the protesters in chanting one of his trademark phrases: “I am! Somebody! I may be poor! But I am! Somebody! I may be unemployed! But I am! Somebody! I may not have health care! But I am! Somebody! Respect me! Protect me! Elect me! I am! God’s child!”
Jackson had long lived with Parkinson’s disease, but it had been announced in November that he had suffered from progressive supranuclear palsy, a rare neurodegenerative condition, for more than a decade.
Jackson as mentor
At the time of Jackson’s November hospitalization, the Rev. Al Sharpton, president of the National Action Network, called Jackson “a mentor, a friend, and a brother for more than 55 years.”
In a statement to The Associated Press released Feb. 17, Sharpton wrote that Jackson “taught me that protest must have purpose, that faith must have feet, and that justice is not seasonal, it is daily work,” adding Jackson taught “trying is as important as triumph. That you do not wait for the dream to come true; you work to make it real.”
In 2023, Jackson announced he was stepping down from the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, which he had led for more than 50 years. He was briefly succeeded by Dallas pastor Rev. Frederick D. Haynes III, but Haynes resigned the position within months.
Yusef Jackson, one of Jackson’s sons, currently serves as chief operating officer of Rainbow PUSH, which is known for its work on social justice, peace, and creating more equitable educational and economic opportunities.
In Keeping Hope Alive, a 2020 collection of his sermons and speeches, Jackson said he was inspired to start using the “somebody” phrase after reading theologian Howard Thurman’s Jesus and the Disinherited.
Jackson recalled the book as he sought to lift the spirits of demonstrators camping out on Washington’s National Mall in rainy conditions during the original Poor People’s Campaign shortly after King’s assassination.
“I’ve been all around the world, and it resonates as much as it did 50 years ago; all around, in every language, people struggle for a sense of somebodiness—marginalized people struggling to find some hope for oxygen, something that helps you to breathe,” he wrote. “It never grows old.”
Hopeful social activism
Though many may have thought of Jackson as more of a politician than a minister, the Rev. Valerie Bridgeman, dean of the Methodist Theological School in Ohio, said he was both. “I don’t think Jesse Jackson saw his political life as something different from his call from God as a preacher,” she told Religion News Service in a 2021 interview.
That dual calling was exemplified by phrases he used as miniature sermons. “‘Keep hope alive’ certainly is an encapsulation of the gospel,” said Bridgeman, who also is a scholar of homiletics, or the art of preaching. “So is ‘I am somebody.’”
CNN anchor Abby Phillip, author of the 2025 book A Dream Deferred: Jesse Jackson and the Fight for Black Political Power, described Jackson’s rhetorical prowess as embodying a sense of “moral grounding” during his runs for president.
“One of the things that made Jesse Jackson such a powerful speaker was not just that he used rhymes and alliteration,” she said at The Texas Tribune Festival in Austin on Nov. 15. “He spoke through religious texts and spoke about a moral premise for his candidacy.”
Over the last dozen years, Jackson continued his activism, speaking out against police killings of Black people, joining the centennial commemoration of the Tulsa race massacre, and marching for peace in a Chicago community wracked by gun violence.
In a Feb. 17 statement, Rev. William Barber II of the Poor People’s Campaign, who met Jackson as a college student, said: “Jesse Jackson was a gift from God and a witness that God exists in the ways he cared for and lifted all people, the way he called forth a rainbow coalition of people to challenge economic and social inequality from the pulpit to a historic presidential run, the way he dared to keep hope alive whenever the nation struggled with being who she says she is and yet ought to be.”
Early days in activism
Jackson, a native of Greenville, S.C., first made headlines in the summer of 1960 as one of the “Greenville Eight,” a group of Black students who sought to desegregate the town’s public library on the advice of a minister and executive of the state NAACP.
Entering the library after being told to leave, the students were arrested and released on $30 bond, according to American Libraries magazine.
After graduating from North Carolina A&T State University, he interrupted his studies at Chicago Theological Seminary in 1965 to start working with King in the Civil Rights Movement.
Ordained a Baptist minister in 1968, Jackson earned his Master of Divinity degree from Chicago Theological Seminary decades later.
In 1966, Jackson was appointed by King to lead the Chicago expansion of Operation Breadbasket, an economic development program of King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference that increased job opportunities for African Americans. Jackson was appointed its national director the next year.
Jackson founded the economic empowerment organization Operation PUSH—People United to Serve Humanity—in 1971 in Chicago and a Washington-based social justice group, National Rainbow Coalition, in 1984. The two merged in 1996 as the Rainbow PUSH Coalition.
Jackson in politics
When he ran for the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination in 1984, in a pioneering grassroots campaign bolstered by the support of Black churches, he drew 3.3 million votes, which he more than doubled in his 1988 run. But some of his positions, including his advocacy for an independent state for Palestinians, were out of step with the Democratic establishment.
He ignited controversy in his first campaign when he was caught on a microphone referring to New York City as “Hymietown,” and though he later apologized, the remark strained relations with Jews.
In the 2000s, Jackson’s diplomacy extended to the Baptist world. He was a prominent participant in a historic meeting of four Black Baptist denominations: the Progressive National Baptist Convention, National Baptist Convention of America, National Missionary Baptist Convention of America and National Baptist Convention, USA.
Over 60 years of activism, Jackson was nearly ubiquitous at times, sometimes bringing prayer into settings that were primarily secular.
In 2000, then-President Bill Clinton awarded Jackson the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.
Controversy and hope
The next year, Jackson made headlines for a more controversial reason. In a statement asking for forgiveness and prayers, he admitted to an extramarital affair that led to the birth of a daughter. “I fully accept responsibility, and I am truly sorry for my actions,” he said.
As he concluded a speech to the annual conference of his Rainbow PUSH Coalition in 2002, Jackson recalled King, his mentor who was a proponent of faith in action, as he urged continuing work on equal access to voting, education, and wealth.
“We need to have the full assurance that God did not bring us this far to leave us now,” he said in the speech included in Keeping Hope Alive. “So, we march for healing and hope. God will forgive our sins and heal our land. Keep hope alive.”


