Chicago Sun-Times

JACKSON ENDORSES SANDERS AHEAD OF CRUCIAL VOTE IN MICHIGAN ON TUESDAY

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

The Rev. Jesse Jackson on Sunday announced his endorsemen­t of Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Bernie Sanders ahead of Tuesday’s pivotal primary in Michigan, a state with a significan­t African American vote.

Jackson’s public support for Sen. Sanders, a Vermont independen­t, came shortly after Democratic front-runner Joe Biden picked up the endorsemen­t of Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., a former presidenti­al candidate who is black.

Jackson, a Chicago civil rights icon and two-time former presidenti­al candidate, backed Sanders a day after the socialist firebrand drew thousands of supporters to a rally at Grant Park in advance of the March 17 Illinois primary.

Later Sunday, Jackson appeared at a Sanders rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The state is now a crucial battlegrou­nd for Sanders, who has fallen behind the former vice president in the delegate count.

“With the exception of Native Americans, African Americans are the people who are most behind socially and economical­ly in the United States, and our needs are not moderate,” Jackson said in a statement issued by the Sanders campaign.

“A people far behind cannot catch up choosing the most moderate path. The most progressiv­e social and economic path gives us the best chance to catch up, and Senator Bernie Sanders represents the most progressiv­e path. That’s why I choose to endorse him today.”

Jackson is no stranger to presidenti­al politics.

The leader of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition staged a pair of unsuccessf­ul presidenti­al bids in 1984 and 1988. Jackson’s issues then resembled Sanders’ platform, including plans to provide free community college for all and create a single-payer health care system. Sanders, who was mayor of Burlington, Vermont, in 1988, endorsed Jackson for president then.

In the 1988 Democratic primary, Jackson earned 6.9 million votes and won 11 primary contests. Michael Dukakis, the former Massachuse­ntts governor, ultimately won the party’s nomination but lost to George H.W. Bush in the general election.

Sanders’ key competitor in the Democratic primary also made a short-lived run for the party’s nomination during that election cycle. On Sunday, Jackson said Biden’s campaign didn’t seek his endorsemen­t in the current race.

Biden is ahead in the delegate count after scoring a series of victories on Super Tuesday and South Carolina. Sanders took aim at Biden’s voting record during Saturday’s rally, slamming his opponent’s support for the Iraq war, the Wall Street bailout, the abortion-related Hyde Amendment and trade agreements such as NAFTA.

This weekend’s endorsemen­ts by Jackson and Harris come at a critical time, as the African American vote is a factor in this week’s Michigan primary.

Perhaps the Harris endorsemen­t healed a rift.

On Friday, at a fundraiser in north suburban Glencoe, Jill Biden was asked about the potential of Harris being a vice presidenti­al pick if her husband is the nominee. Jill Biden said remarks the California senator made at a debate last summer hit Biden like a gut punch.

At that debate, Harris confronted Biden on his remarks she said were defending his working with two segregatio­nist senators. Harris called those remarks “hurtful.” Biden said at that debate he never defended “racists.”

Jill Biden said Harris had a very close “bond” with the Bidens’ son, the late Beau Biden, who was a Delaware attorney general. When Joe Biden looked surprised on the debate stage, Jill Biden told the Glencoe group it was because “our son, Beau, spoke so highly of her and you know, and how great she was. And not that she isn’t, I’m not saying that. But it was just like a punch to the gut; it was a little unexpected.”

In addition to Michigan, Biden and Sanders will face off Tuesday in five other primary elections.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Rev. Jesse Jackson stands with Sen. Bernie Sanders on Sunday at a rally in Calder Plaza in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES The Rev. Jesse Jackson stands with Sen. Bernie Sanders on Sunday at a rally in Calder Plaza in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
 ??  ?? Sen. Kamala Harris
Sen. Kamala Harris

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