How Jesse Jackson set the stage for Bernie Sanders and today's progressives

Bernie Sanders, then the mayor of Burlington, greets Jesse Jackson backstage at a 1988 Vermont rally where he endorsed Jacksons presidential bid. AP Photo/Toby Talbot
Jesse Jacksons two campaigns for president, in 1984 and 1988, were unsuccessful but historic. The civil rights activist and organizer, who died on Feb. 17, 2026, helped pave the way for Barack Obamas election a generation later as the nations first and so far only African American president.
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Vermont, where I teach political science, did not look like fertile ground for Jackson when he first ran for president. Then, as now, Vermont was one of the most homogeneous, predominantly white states in the country. But if Jackson seemed like an awkward fit for a mostly rural, lily-white state, he nonetheless saw possibilities there.
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He did not win Vermont, taking just 8% of the Democratic primary vote in 1984 but tripling his share to 26% in 1988. Appealing to voters in small, rural New England precincts was a remarkable achievement for a candidate identified with Chicago and civil rights campaigns in the South.
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Jacksons presidential ambitions coincided with a pivotal moment in Vermont politics: The states voting patterns were shifting left, with new residents arriving and changing the states culture and economy. In 1970, nearly 70% of Vermonters had been born there. By 1990, that figure had dropped by 10 percentage points.
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https://newpittsburghcourier.com/2026/02/20/how-jesse-jackson-set-the-stage-for-bernie-sanders-and-todays-progressives/