The Reverend Jesse Jackson died yesterday at age 84. Although in the past couple of decades, he was not the public presence he once was, it speaks to his stature that Trump issued what was, for him, at least, a remarkably appreciative and respectful statement in the wake of his death. In the 1980s and early 90s, the era in which Trump’s brain is stuck, Jackson was a figure of the first importance.
My book deals with the period just after Jackson’s political rise and chronicles his defeat and diminution by Bill Clinton. However, he was still a force to contend with, someone who required what Jackson called a “Machiavellian maneuver” to sideline. That maneuver is the now-legendary “Sister Souljah moment,” which is more invoked than understood. That was when, at a Rainbow Coalition event, Clinton attacked the rapper and activist Sister Souljah and criticized Jackson for including her in the Rainbow Coalition/PUSH conference. (In the wake of the Rodney King riots, Souljah had called the upheaval “revenge” and “rebellion” in The Washington Post and sounded a lot like she was defending the killing of whites to that end. For her part, Souljah said she was explaining, not justifying, the riots.)
As much as it showed Clinton’s cunning, “Sister Souljah” also demonstrated the tenuous ground that Jackson stood on. Sister Souljah represented a new, younger, angrier voice of activism, one that Jackson was trying to minister to and incorporate in his fraying coalition. Souljah had repeatedly criticized and mocked Jackson, but he felt he could not throw her under the bus without looking like a sellout and losing the youth. Even in his own time, he represented the past: he was a bridge to the Civil Rights era, rooted in the tradition of the Black Church. He also kept alive the hopes of the New Deal and the Great Society, of an “America [that] will get better and better,” as he said in his 1988 convention barn burner. Another misunderstanding about Souljah and Jackson: she was not his left flank; in important ways, she was to his right. Souljah represented a Black Nationalist tradition that stressed exclusively Black enterprise and a self-reliant rejection of the welfare state—she was much closer to Bill Clinton in policy proposals—while Jackson remained a stalwart tribune of American social democracy in the Reagan era.