Jesse Jackson, towering icon of civil rights, dies following lengthy illness

The Rev.Jesse Jackson, a towering civil rights icon who battled alongside Martin Luther King Jr., negotiated global hostage releases, and shamed corporations for their lack of corporate diversity and failure to support voting rights, has died.

Jackson was a Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient, a Democratic presidential candidate and one of the world's best-known Black activists.

He was 84 and had suffered from progressive supranuclear palsy, a rare disease that causes a decline similar to Parkinson's disease but accelerated.

"It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of Civil Rights leader and founder of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, the Honorable Reverend Jesse Louis Jackson, Sr.," said a statement from the organization. "He died peacefully on Tuesday morning, surrounded by his family."

Despite the illness that softened his voice and weakened his steps, Jackson had continued to advocate for civil rights and was arrested twice in 2021 over his objection to the Senate filibuster rule. That same year, he and his wife, Jacqueline,were hospitalizedwith COVID-19 complications at a Chicago hospital.

"His longevity is part of the story," said Rashad Robinson, the former president of the 7-million-member online justice organization Color of Change. "This is someone who had so many chances to do something else. And this is what he chose to do with his life."

Jackson's death comes amidst a rising tide of white nationalism and voting-rights access issues, and follows the loss of other civil rights icons, including former Rep.John Lewis, who died in 2020.

PresidentDonald Trumpsaid he'd worked with Jackson for decades, providing office space for his coalition. Jackson had previously said he and Trump had split over the fate of the Central Park Five ‒ the group of Hispanic and Black teens convicted but ultimately exonerated in the 1989 sexual assault of a woman in New York City's Central Park. Trump had taken out newspaper advertisements calling for the teens to be executed.

"Jesse was a force of nature like few others before him," Trump said in a social media post. "He loved his family greatly, and to them I send my deepest sympathies and condolences. Jesse will be missed!"

The making of a Civil Rights icon

Born in Greenville, South Carolina,Jackson's rise to prominencebegan after he and seven other men were arrested in 1960 ‒ he was 18 at the time ‒ for protesting segregation at their town's public library. He then joined King's burgeoning civil rights fight and was just feet away when King was assassinated in 1968.

Jackson founded what would ultimately become the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, and ran for president as a Democrat in 1984 and 1988, energizing and registering millions of Black voters.

"As we continue in the struggle for human rights, remember that God will see us through, even in our midnight moments," Jackson said in 2017 as he announced his neuromuscular disease diagnosis.

Civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson pays respects over the casket of George Floyd prior to the start of the George Floyd family memorial service in the Frank J. Lindquist sanctuary at North Central University in Minneapolis, Minn. on June 4, 2020.

Jackson visited Minneapolis in 2021 to support protesters awaiting the verdict in the trial ofDerek Chauvin, the former police officer who was convicted days later of killing George Floyd in an incident that set off national protests and violence.

While there, he also attended services for Daunte Wright, a Black man who was shot and killed by a police officer during a protest against police violence in a nearby suburb. Speaking in a subdued voice, Jackson reminded the young activists leading a protest march that their cause was just.

In a statement, civil rights attorney Ben Crump mourned his friend as someone who helped shape his own life. Crump has become the go-to lawyer for Black families seeking justice and represented some of Floyd's family members. Crump said Jackson helped broaden the path for people of color to shape America through politics and public life.

"Rev. Jackson conceived of a more just and inclusive America, believed in it with unwavering faith, and dedicated his entire life to achieving it – all while teaching the next generation how to carry the torch forward," Crump said. "He was an unstoppable and formidable force, proving that no opponent or battle was too big."

Born in the fall of 1941 to a teenage mother and her married neighbor, Jackson was adopted by the man his mother married, and he considered both to be his fathers. He attended a segregated high school and played football in college, dropping out a few credits short of his master's degree in divinity in 1966 to join the Civil Rights Movement full time.

By 1965, he'd marched with King and others from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, to push for Black voting rights, and by 1967 was running operations for King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Chicago, the city that would become his home.

Under Jackson, the SCLC's Operation Breadbasket used boycotts and public attention to pressure companies to hire more Black workers. Jackson ultimately earned his divinity degree after being ordained a minister in 1968.

More:America was born in protest. What's changed 250 years later?

Democratic presidential candidates Walter Mondale (L) and Jesse Jackson (2nd, L) participate in the Democratic debate at Columbia University on March 28, 1984, in New York, while Gary Hart (R) answers to a question from journalist and TV presenter Dan Rather (back).

In 1983, shortly before announcing his run for president, Jackson traveled to Syria to negotiate the release of an American pilot shot down over Lebanon, and the next summer, he negotiated the release of 22 Americans and 26 political prisoners from Cuba after meeting with former dictator Fidel Castro.

His successes bolstered his presidential campaign, although he lost the 1984 Democratic primary to Walter Mondale, who went on to lose toRonald Reagan. Jackson ran again for president in 1988, putting on a strong showing but ultimately falling to Mike Dukakis, who lost to Republican George H.W. Bush.

After that second loss, Jackson shelved his own political aspirations but continued his efforts for civil rights and justice.

In 1990, Jackson opposed the pending invasion of Iraq and negotiated the release of hundreds of people whom Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein had threatened to use as human shields, and then in 1999 won the release of three U.S. POWs during the Kosovo War.

'There certainly would have been no Barack Obama … no Bill Clinton either'

Robinson, the former president of Color of Change, remembers listening and watching as his family members made their first political donations after listening to one of Jackson's presidential campaign speeches.

"I didn't understand everything he said, but I understood what it meant," said Robinson, who later wrote a college paper on Jackson's campaigns. "He was such a possibility model. There are so many people who are in politics today who would not be where they are today thanks to Jesse Jackson. There certainly would be no Barack Obama if there was no Jesse Jackson. And there would have been no Bill Clinton either."

In 2000, Clinton awarded Jackson the Presidential Medal of Freedom, citing his decades of work to make the world a better place.

More:Jesse Jackson: Five key moments in Civil Rights icon's career

Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton (R) joins hands with Rev. Jesse Jackson in Atlanta, September 9, 1992, before joining those attending the National Baptist Convention in a song.

"It's hard to imagine how we could have come as far as we have without the creative power, the keen intellect, the loving heart, and the relentless passion of Jesse Lewis Jackson," Clinton said.

Trahern Crews, who helped found the Black Lives Matter-Minnesota chapter, said he grew up with Jackson's "I am Somebody" recitations ringing in his ears. Jackson often led crowds in a call-and-answer chant that usually included variations on "I may be poor … but I am … Somebody. I may be young … but I am … Somebody."

"That allowed future generations to stand up and follow and his footsteps and declare Black Lives Matter and recognize our humanity," Crews said. "When we go back and watch videos of Rev. Jesse Jackson marching and fighting for housing rights, voting rights, ending housing discrimination, and said, 'I am Somebody,' that encouraged activists of today to stand up and fight against 400 years of racist policies in the United States."

Jackson's family includes his wife of 63 years, Jacqueline "Jackie" Jackson, and six children: Santita, Jesse Jr., Jonathan, Yusef, Jacqueline and Ashley. In 1999,he fathered a childwith Karin Stanford, the director of the Washington bureau of his organization, the Rainbow PUSH Coalition. He first publicly acknowledged his daughter, Ashley, in 2001 and apologized for his affair.

Kristen Clarke, the former assistant attorney general for civil rights under the Biden-era Department of Justice, said in a statement that Jackson helped make America a more just nation.

"A tireless and extraordinary public servant, his charge to all of us was to stay hopeful, keep up the good fight and respect the dignity and humanity of all people," Clarke said. "Jackson has been, and will always be, a central part of the story regarding America's ongoing quest for justice and equality.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jesse Jackson dies after long illness. Civil Rights icon was 84.

Jesse Jackson, towering icon of civil rights, dies following lengthy illness

The Rev.Jesse Jackson, a towering civil rights icon who battled alongside Martin Luther King Jr., negotiated global host...
Peru's Congress to debate a motion to remove interim President Jerí, 4 months into his term

LIMA, Peru (AP) — Peru's Congress was set to vote Tuesday on a motion to remove interim President José Jerí as prosecutors look intoallegations of corruption involving unreported meetingsbetween Jerí and two Chinese businessmen.

If the legislators secure a majority, Jerí will be ousted from the presidency a mere four months into his term. His removal would trigger yet another transition, forcing the legislature to appoint a new leader and marking a volatile new chapter in Peruvian politics just two months before national elections.

Jerí is the seventh president to lead the nation in the past decade. Hewas sworn into office in October, after his predecessor was ousted by Congress over corruption allegations and a rise in violent crime. He now faces removal from office from his former colleagues in Congress, who have accused him of misconduct and lack of capacity to carry out his presidential duties.

The 39-year-old interim president said he was hopeful he would survive the vote.

"I'm not dead yet," Jerí said during an interview over the weekend on Peruvian television Panamericana, insisting he would continue to serve the people of Peru until his "last day" in the presidential palace.

If he is removed from office, the legislators will choose a new president from among their members to govern until July 28, when he the interim leader will hand over the office to the winner of the April 12 presidential election.

In turn, Jerí will return to his position as a legislator until July 28, when the new Congress also takes office.

It is also possible that the legislators will not vote for removal. The president is supported by the Fuerza Popular party, led bypresidential candidate Keiko Fujimorithe daughter of a former president who was imprisoned for human rights abuses.

The accusations against Jerí stem from a leaked report regarding a clandestine December meeting with two Chinese executives. One attendee holds active government contracts, while the other is currently under investigation for alleged involvement in an illegal logging operation.

Jerí has denied wrongdoing. He said he met the executives to organize a Peruvian-Chinese festivity, but his opponents have accused him of corruption.

The crisis is the latest chapter in a prolonged political collapse in a country that has seenseven presidents since 2016, and is about to hold a general election amid widespread public outcry over a surge in violent crime.

Despite a revolving door of presidents, Peru's economy has remained stable.

The Andean nation had an external debt to gross domestic product ratio of 32% in 2024, one of the lowest in Latin America, and the government has welcomed foreign investment in areas like mining and infrastructure.

Follow AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean athttps://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

Peru's Congress to debate a motion to remove interim President Jerí, 4 months into his term

LIMA, Peru (AP) — Peru's Congress was set to vote Tuesday on a motion to remove interim President José Jerí as prose...
Stephen Colbert Slams CBS On-Air for Banning Interview With Democrat Candidate

Stephen Colbertdidn't hold back on Monday's (February 16)Late Showas he blasted his CBS bosses andFCC chairman Brendan Carrfor banning his interview with Texas Democratic state representative James Talarico.

TV Insider Stephen Colbert

At the top of the show, the late-night host introduced his house band and hyped the line-up of guests for Monday's show, which includedThe Last Thing He Told MestarJennifer Garner. He then told his audience, "You know who is not one of my guests tonight? That's Texas state representative James Talarico."

Colbert went on to explain, "He was supposed to be here, but we were told in no uncertain terms by our network's lawyers, who called us directly, that we could not have him on the broadcast."

As the studio audience booed, the comedian added, "Then, I was told, in some uncertain terms, that not only could I not have him on, I could not mention me not having him on. And because my network clearly does not want us to talk about this… Let's talk about this."

Colbert, who will broadcast thefinal episodeofThe Late Showin May, revealed the scrapped interview was the result of new guidance from FCC Chair Carr, who suggested that late-night shows follow the "equal time" rule. This rule requires broadcasters to provide equal time to each political candidate running for office.

There has long been an exception for news and talk-show interviews with politicians. However, as Colbert pointed out, Carr's latest guidelines said he was thinking about dropping the exception for late-night talk shows because "some of them are motivated by partisan purposes."

"Well, FCC you," Colbert retorted. "I think you are motivated by partisan purposes yourself. Sir, you smelt it because you dealt it. Let's call this what it is:Donald Trump's administration wants to silence anyone who says anything bad about Trump on TV because all Trump does is watch TV. He's like a toddler with too much screen time."

Advertisement

The host said the two people most affected by this new rule are himself and his friend and fellow late-night host,Jimmy Kimmel. Kimmel drew the ire of Carr last year after comments he made on-air about the death of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.ABC temporarily suspendedKimmel following backlash from right-wing critics.

Colbert played a clip of Carr defending his new guidelines, in which the FCC Chair said, "If Kimmel or Colbert want to continue to do their programming, and they don't want to have to comply with this requirement, then they can go to a cable channel or a podcast or a streaming service, and that's fine."

"I decided to take Brendan Carr's advice," Colbert said, telling his audience that he would still interview Talarico and post the entirety of it on theLate ShowYouTube channel. "The network says I can't give you a URL or a QR code, but I promise you, if you go to our YouTube page, you find it."

CBS previously announcedthatThe Late Showwould end in May 2026, following the close of the 2025–26 broadcast season. The network cited financial reasons for the cancellation, claiming the show loses $40 million annually. Some critics argued the axing was politically motivated, with parent company Paramount hoping to appease President Trump amid its merger with Skydance, which required government approval.

You can watch Colbert's monologue and the full interview with Talarico in the videos above.

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,Weeknights, 11:35/10:35c, CBS

Read the latest entertainment news onTV Insider.

Stephen Colbert Slams CBS On-Air for Banning Interview With Democrat Candidate

Stephen Colbertdidn't hold back on Monday's (February 16)Late Showas he blasted his CBS bosses andFCC chairman B...
'Signal Sniffer' Technology Used to Search for Nancy Guthrie: Reports

Savannah Guthrie/Instagram

People Nancy Guthrie. Savannah Guthrie/Instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • Nancy Guthrie was reported missing on the morning of Feb. 1. Hours before, authorities said they believed she was taken from her home unwillingly, and her pacemaker device was disconnected from her cell phone around 2:28 a.m. local time

  • On Sunday, Feb. 15, authorities reportedly deployed a "signal sniffer" in an effort to ping a signal from Nancy's pacemaker as the search for the 84-year-old mother of Today co-host Savannah Guthrie enters its third week

  • "All we need is one little transmission, and it's honed in just to her pacemaker's address. So we're only seeing Nancy's address; this 100% could work," David Kennedy, who invented and provided the device to authorities, said on CNN Monday, Feb. 16

Authorities are using a "signal sniffer" as the search forNancy Guthrieenters its third week, according to reports.

The tracking tool has been attached to a helicopter in an attempt to detect signals from Nancy's pacemaker, law enforcement sources toldCBS News.

"Nancy has a pacemaker, and in that technology, there's what's called Bluetooth Low Energy, which emits a very non-powerful transmission that you can communicate with your mobile devices for," David Kennedy, a former NSA hacker who created and provided the device to authorities, said during an appearance on CNN Monday, Feb. 16.

He referenced helicopters flying "really low to the ground" near Nancy's home, and noted that the distance to be able to ping a signal from Nancy's pacemaker is "very low."

"So they're sweeping the areas looking for this transmission," Kennedy said. "I was able to confirm that based on the pacemaker she has, it will broadcast every three to four minutes or so with a very small transmission. If authorities are able to capture that and triangulate exactly where Nancy is based off of her pacemaker."

The 84-year-old woman was reported missing on Feb. 1, having been last seen at her Tucson, Ariz., home on Jan. 31.Guthrie's doorbell camera was disconnectedat 1:47 a.m., local time. Then, a person on camera was detected at 2:12 a.m. Sixteen minutes later, at 2:28 a.m., Guthrie's pacemaker was disconnected from the pacemaker app on her cellphone, authorities previously said.

The FBI and Pima County Sheriff's Office are working together on the investigation. The FBI didn't respond to PEOPLE's request for comment.

Kennedy said on Monday that authorities could use what's called "high gain antennas and amplifiers" to "expand" their reach, as the signal sniffer devices typically only transmit 15 to 35 feet. With an amplifier, a signal's reach can stretch to anywhere between 800 to 1,000 feet.

Using drones instead of helicopters could potentially cover more ground as the search for Guthrie continues, Kennedy added.

"All we need is one little transmission, and it's honed in just to her pacemaker's address. So we're only seeing Nancy's address; this 100% could work," said Kennedy. "You have a lot of area to cover. She could be 1 mile from the house or 100 miles."

Advertisement

The signal from the pacemaker can "continue for multiple years afterwards, even if an individual is deceased," Kennedy said, adding that an amplifier can "cut through" factors like concrete, metal and oversaturation.

Suspect captured on Nancy Guthrie's Nest camera footage Pima County Sheriff's Department

Pima County Sheriff's Department

Tracy Walder, a former CIA and FBI agent tells PEOPLE that the signal sniffer is a "new" and "somewhat experimental" form of technology.

"I don't know how effective it's going to be in finding Nancy's pacemaker because you have to be just 30 to 100 feet from the pacemaker, it's hard to detect," they add. "So a helicopter has to hover low and slow in one particular area to look for it. I don't think that's practical. They need to know where they are looking."

Officials believe a masked, hooded figure seen on Nancy'sdoorbell camerakidnapped her in the early morning hours of Feb. 1.

The FBI Phoenix office later sharedadditional details describing the suspect: "The suspect is described as a male, approximately 5'9" - 5'10" tall, with an average build. In the video, he is wearing a black, 25-liter 'Ozark Trail Hiker Pack' backpack."

Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos said in a statement on Monday that "The Guthrie family — to include all siblings and spouses — has been cleared as possible suspects."

On Sunday, Feb. 15, Nancy's daughter,Todayco-host Savannah Guthrie, shared an Instagramvideo, urging "whoever has her or knows where she is" to come forward."It's never too late,"she concluded the emotional video, adding in the caption: "Bring her home. It's never too late to do the next right thing."

Nancy and Savannah Guthrie on May 4, 2015 in Sydney, Australia. Don Arnold/WireImage

Don Arnold/WireImage

Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up forPEOPLE's free True Crime newsletterfor breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases.

A$100,000 rewardhas been offered for any information leading to Nancy's recovery or an arrest in the case.

Anyone with information about Nancy Guthrie's disappearance is asked to please contact 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324) or the Pima County Sheriff's Department 520-351-4900.

Read the original article onPeople

‘Signal Sniffer’ Technology Used to Search for Nancy Guthrie: Reports

Savannah Guthrie/Instagram NEED TO KNOW Nancy Guthrie was reported missing on the morning of Feb. 1. Hours ...

 

MN MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com