
Remembering Jesse Jackson: Tributes pour in for the late civil rights leader
CNN
Jesse Jackson, a civil rights activist and clergyman, has died. Follow for live updates.
• The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a towering civil rights leader whose moral vision and fiery oratory reshaped the Democratic Party and America, has died, his son said today. • Jackson, 84, had been hospitalized in recent months and was under observation for progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), the Rainbow PUSH Coalition has said. • Civil rights activist Rev. Al Sharpton described Jackson as his mentor and “a movement unto himself,” while Bernice King posted a photo of Jackson alongside her father, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr, with the words, “Both now ancestors.” Former Obama White House chief of staff and former mayor of Chicago, Rahm Emanuel, praised the late Jesse Jackson as a “moral voice” for those in power, including himself. Having known Jackson as a citizen, mayor and White House chief of staff, Emanuel said Jackson “challenged all of us and he made us better.” “We had a complicated relationship,” Emanuel told CNN’s Kate Bolduan, later saying he meant it not as criticism but as an observation of his power “as a moral voice, a political voice, and an influential voice.”

The retirement of Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin after nearly 30 years in office sparked an expensive three-way Democratic primary that has showcased the party’s divisions over how to confront President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown and introduced pro-crypto forces as an influence seeking to shape the midterm elections. The contest is also setting up a test of Gov. JB Pritzker’s political clout in the state as he eyes a potential 2028 presidential bid.

Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro, grandson of former Cuban President Raúl Castro, appeared for the first time alongside Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel at two public events on Friday, raising questions, according to analysts, about his role in Cuba’s leadership as the island faces calls for regime change from the United States.











