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<text id=93HT1153>
<title>
84 Election: Jesse Jackson:Pride and Prejudice
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1984 Election
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
May 7, 1984
NATION
Pride and Prejudice
</hdr>
<body>
<p>For better or worse, Jackson brings race to the forefront of the
campaign
</p>
<p>By Evan Thomas. Reported by Hays Gorey/Washington, B.J.
Phillips/Atlanta and Jack E. White with Jackson, with other
bureaus.
</p>
<p> There is the Jesse Jackson that blacks revere. He is the
embodiment of black pride, an incandescent force glowing beside
dull white politicians, demanding respect and "our fair share."
He is the powerbroker who is ignored or patronized at great
risk.
</p>
<p> There is the Jesse Jackson that many whites distrust and
some even fear. He is the former black radical, the civil
rights leader who threatened white businessmen with economic
boycotts, the presidential candidate who called Jews "Hymie" and
New York City "Hymietown." In his shadow, neither embraced nor
disavowed, stands Minister Louis Farrakhan, leader of the
Nation of Islam, a Black Muslim sect, who has praised Hitler and
seemed to threaten a black reporter with death.
</p>
<p> In recent weeks, these conflicting perceptions of Jesse
Jackson have come to overshadow his remarkable achievements in
the Democratic primaries. Almost overnight, he shattered the
prevailing wisdom that a black could not make a credible run
for the presidency. He has spurred an unprecedented black voter
turnout, outlasted five more politically experienced white
rivals, and picked up enough delegates and prestige to play a
major role at the Democratic Convention in July. Says former
Democratic National Committee Chairman Robert Strauss: "Jesse
Jackson has had a larger impact on American politics than
either he or anyone else anticipated." But as his successes
multiplied, so did concerns about his candidacy. Would he raise
the arm of the Democratic nominee in San Francisco, or stalk
angrily from the convention hall? Would he bring out the black
vote for Democrats in November, or sit sulking on the
sidelines? Would his efforts lead to black political power or
white backlash?
</p>
<p> The Jackson campaign, unavoidably, has brought questions
of race back to the forefront of American politics. The
candidate himself has not used race in a demagogic way, as
George Wallace did in 1968. Indeed, Jackson has tried to add
other colors to his Rainbow Coalition. But the electorate is
polarized nevertheless, with blacks voting overwhelmingly for
Jackson and whites voting overwhelmingly for white candidates.
"A certain latent racism has come out," says Gary Wills, Henry
Luce Professor of American Culture and Public Policy at
Northwestern University. "People say, 'Whenever I hear somebody
stir up crowds, I think of Hitler.' That kind of comment shows
a blindness to black style, and it's most often said by people
who've never heard a black church service."
</p>
<p> Jackson's appeals to black pride, almost by definition,
are racially charged. In effect, he is asking blacks to vote
for him because he is black. The white majority would quickly
condemn a white candidate who practiced such overt racial
politics. But with blacks, the situation is far more delicate.
Sensitive to the victimization of blacks throughout American
history, whites tend to be reticent about criticizing them,
especially on racial matters.
</p>
<p> Because of his color, and because he was never given a
realistic chance of winning the nomination, Jackson has been
treated differently from the other candidates. His rivals dealt
with him gingerly, hoping not to alienate potential black
support in the fall. The press concentrated on his vivid
campaign style and rarely challenged his positions on the
issues. He did not come under intense press scrutiny until his
"Hymie" remark touched off conflicting charges of white and
black racism. "Jesse hasn't injected racism into politics. His
campaign has only brought to the surface things that were there
long before," insists Ernest Green, one of Jackson's closest
advisers. "To make that accusation is a classic case of blaming
the victim for the crime."
</p>
<p> Whoever was to blame, the flaring of the racial issue was
like jiggling political nitroglycerin. Avoiding an explosion
became as important to Democrats as choosing their presidential
nominee. Their best hope was that the debate would be
constructive and clear the air for the fall. Racism in the U.S.
is less obvious than in the past but it has hardly gone away,
and some thought that a candid discussion of the issue could
strengthen the party. As Hodding Carter, an official in the
Carter Administration and a crusader for civil rights as a
Mississippi newspaper editor in the 1960s, wrote last week, "We
ought to thank Mr. Jackson for running. Not because he should or
shouldn't be President, but because his candidacy has helped to
put race and things racial back in public view where they
belong."
</p>
<p> Getting the public's attention has been a Jackson trademark
from the time he first worked for Martin Luther King Jr. in
1966. Over the years, as a preacher, a civil rights leader and
now a politician, he has kept the same goal: instilling in
blacks a sense of self-worth. The message he gave black
teen-agers as he toured the country during the late '70s for his
PUSH (People United to Serve Humanity) for Excellence, Inc.,
program was identical to the one delivered by white middle-class
parents to their teen-age children, except that it came from a
black man wearing an Afro haircut and speaking in rhyme. "Down
with dope! Up with hope!" Jackson would shout. "Less than your
best is a sin! You are not a man because you can make a baby!
It takes a man to raise one!" By the end of these
exhortations, schoolchildren would line up to sign pledges that
they would study for two hours every school night, without radio
or TV.
</p>
<p> In recent years, Jackson has stressed an additional
message: that the path to black success was through the polling
place. With the same evangelical style, he intoned to
audiences, "There's a freedom train acoming. But you got to be
registered to ride!" Then and there he would march listeners
to the courthouse to sign voter rolls. Even Farrakhan, who has
claimed that the American political process was too "corrupt"
to deserve black votes, enrolled.
</p>
<p> At rally after rally, Jackson cried, "Hands that picked
cotton will pick the President! From the guttermost to the
uttermost! From the outhouse to the White House!" And the
audiences would pick up the chant: "Run, Jesse, run! Run,
Jesse, run!" Jackson, 42 finally heeded the chant--against the
wishes of many black leaders. Established black politicians like
Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young, Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and
Harlem Congressman Charles Rangel feared that Jackson would
split the liberal vote for Mondale and thereby nominate the
more conservative John Glenn. They feared that Jackson knew too
little about conventional politics, that he was too
freewheeling and flamboyant. They feared he would fail and
embarrass an entire race. Not a few whites agreed.
</p>
<p> They were wrong. Early polls showed that Jackson could
take only about 40% of the black vote. But in the most recent
three big primaries--Illinois, New York and Pennsylvania--Jackson
won between 74% and 89% of the black vote. In New York,
he came within two percentage points of beating Gary Hart. Many
political experts predicted that Jackson would have about 150
delegates with him going into the Democratic Convention. It now
appears that he could have twice that many. "Whether I win or
lose," Jackson declares, "American politics will never be the
same."
</p>
<p> Jackson has overcome a lack of funds (he has raised about
$2 million, compared with about $15 million for Mondale and $3
million for Hart) and a campaign organization that does not
deserve the name. The black church is Jackson's base and a
principal source of his funds (collected by passing the hat to
parishioners, who drop in wrinkled dollar bills as Jackson
exhorts, "Don't make change, just drop it in the bucket!"). On
the Jackson campaign, schedules are merely suggestions, and
Secret Service agents joke that the candidate runs on
"J.S.T."--Jesse Standard Time. Although he has not bought a single
television advertisement, he has become a fixture on the
evening news, sopping up a fortune's worth of "free media."
</p>
<p> A major breakthrough for Jackson occurred when the eight
Democratic contenders squared off for their first national
debate, which came before the New Hampshire primary. Jackson
more than held his own; he was poised, reasonable and witty. He
added to his credibility as a candidate by playing peacemaker
when Hart and Mondale squabbled at the New York debate. Says
Minerva Johnican, a Memphis city councilwoman and Hart
supporter: "Jesse really surprised a lot of people. Previously,
other black leaders thought he was an opportunist, out for
himself and himself only. I think the perception of Jackson has
changed."
</p>
<p> Jackson has extraordinary appeal among young blacks, but
he has also been able to win over middle-class and older blacks,
many of whom were dubious. They see him as an alternative to
Michael Jackson and "Mr. T" of television's The A-Team as a
black role model for their children. Says retired Schoolteacher
Jessie Adderley, 75, mother of the late jazz musician
Cannonball Adderley and grandmother of Brown and Yale students:
"Black youngsters looking at Reverend Jackson will have the
feeling now they have a chance. Maybe now they will buckle down
and apply themselves."
</p>
<p> The dream of growing up to be President one day may be a
cliche, but until Jackson came along it was only a white cliche.
More immediately, Jackson has inspired black adults to run for
local office. They were winning on the local level already,
especially in cities (four of the six largest have black
mayors), but Jackson for the first time has demonstrated black
political power on the national level.
</p>
<p> Although few have voted for Jackson, many whites say they
admire him. In New York, where he polled only 7% of the white
vote, Jackson was seen as an "attractive, forceful leader" by
two out of three voters, a higher positive rating than given to
either Hart or Mondale, according to a Harris poll. Said
Pollster Louis Harris: "Jackson might be President if he were
white."
</p>
<p> That Jackson cannot win the Democratic nomination does not
discourage blacks from supporting him. By voting for him, blacks
cast "a vote of confidence in themselves," says Albert McDaniel,
44, an administrator for a skills-training school in Chicago.
"Jackson is saying you have to judge winning in more than one
way. The rise of pride among people who never gave a thought to
voting--that's winning. People renewing hope in the Democratic
system--that's a definite win."
</p>
<p> Blacks know that if Jackson goes to the Democratic
Convention with enough delegates, he can extract important
concessions from the party. Many blacks do not trust white
Democrats, no matter how liberal their voting records, to push
their interests. Indeed, with the party preoccupied with cutting
the federal deficit, issues of vital importance to
blacks--affirmative action, teen-age unemployment, the black
underclass--are hardly discussed by white candidates. Says Max Palevsky,
a liberal activist in Los Angeles: "The Democrats have lost
their way and become a not too articulate reflection of the
Republicans. Instead of sweeping these issues under the rug,
Jackson is lifting the rug up."
</p>
<p> A vote for Mondale or Hart, Jackson tells voters, means
"getting off a Republican elephant and onto a Democratic donkey
going in the same direction, just a little slower. We need a
new direction. It is better to lose an election going in the
right direction than win going in the wrong direction." Some
blacks carry that logic to its literal conclusion. Asked if she
feared that a vote for Jackson would actually help Reagan,
Chicago Secretary Selestine Humphrey answered, "I don't want to
see Reagan back, but if that's the price black people have to
pay for some respect, I say let's pay it." The message to
white Democrats is that black voters can no longer be taken for
granted because they have "nowhere else to go." Says Jackson:
"We had to break the dependency syndrome. We moved from a
relationship born of paternalism to one born of power."
</p>
<p> Having taken Jackson lightly at first, neither heeding him
nor holding him accountable, many whites were unsettled by his
soaring prominence. They scrutinized his calls for racial pride,
looking for overt signs of racism. Unfortunately, Jackson
provided one. A foolish and offensive remark, spoken in an
unguarded moment, set off a chain of events that threatened to
overwhelm Jackson's accomplishments with controversy and
bitterness.
</p>
<p> "Let's talk black talk," Jackson said to two black
reporters on Jan. 25 as he waited for a flight at Washington's
National Airport. It was in the course of that conversation that
Jackson dropped his "Hymie" bombshell. One of the reporters,
Milton Coleman of the Washington Post, passed on the remark to
a white colleague, Rick Atkinson, who used it in the 37th
paragraph of a story about Jackson's foreign policy. Jackson at
first insisted that he had no recollection of making the remark,
then apologized in a synagogue two days before the New
Hampshire primary.
</p>
<p> The controversy had almost subsided when Farrakhan, the
Muslim leader who has been making appearances with Jackson and
furnishing him with bodyguards, declared on a radio sermon,
"We're going to make an example of Milton Coleman! What do
(we) intend to do? At this point no physical harm...One day
soon we will punish you with death!" As a gratuitous aside,
Farrakhan allowed that Hitler was "a very great man" albeit a
"wicked" one.
</p>
<p> Until his incendiary words burst into national headlines,
Farrakhan, 50, was--to whites, at least--the obscure leader
of a fringe movement. A onetime nightclub singer known as the
Charmer, Farrakhan in 1955 joined the puritanical (no smoking or
drinking) Nation of Islam, a black separatist group founded by
Elijah Muhammad in the 1930s. Once 250,000-members strong, the
Nation of Islam split apart upon Muhammad's death in 1975. His
son Imam W. Deen Muhammad renamed the group the American Muslim
Mission, rejected many of his father's teachings and began
admitting whites. Farrakhan formed his own faction, keeping the
Nation of Islam name and prophesying that one day white "devils"
would be incinerated by holy fire, leaving Black Muslims to rule
the earth. Farrakhan can claim only between 5,000 and 10,000
followers, but his influence is spread by a weekly radio show.
Says he: "I never dreamed that my words, spoken not on his
platform but on my own, on my own radio show, paid for with our
own money, would be taken and used by the media to bring me to
public attention."
</p>
<p> Farrakhan, in the tradition of Elijah Muhammad, speaks in
an apocalyptic tongue that many whites find frightening but
that many blacks do not take seriously. "I don't represent
violence," Farrakhan insisted to TIME. "Not at all, and I'm not
antiwhite, I'm against that which whites have done to blacks...we're
anti-oppression, antityranny, anti-exploitation."
By any standard, however, his remarks were outrageous in a
presidential campaign, and they demanded a quick denunciation
from Jackson. None was forthcoming. Instead, Jackson commented
that Coleman and Farrakhan were "two very able professionals
caught in a cycle that could be damaging to their careers." He
later stated that Farrakhan's apparent death threat was
"counterproductive" and "wrong," but he complained that the
pressures to disavow Farrakhan were a "form of harassment" by
the white media. Why not badger President Reagan to reject his
endorsement by the Ku Klux Klan? Jackson asked reporters. The
furthest Jackson would go was to demote Farrakhan from
"surrogate" to "supporter."
</p>
<p> Jackson's "Hymie" slur and his failure to repudiate
Farrakhan caused outrage in several respected quarters. The New
Republic, a leading liberal magazine with a strong pro-Israel
slant, editorialized that Jackson's "potential for blighting the
future of interracial politics and for wounding the Democratic
Party now seems great indeed." Carl T. Rowan, the most widely
circulated black columnist, warned that Jackson might be
stirring a white backlash that would help reelect Reagan, "in
which case Jackson is going to have to face the
conscience-searing question: Why, in his stubborn embrace of a
few black demagogues, he has made it so easy for the Reaganites
to appeal to white racism?"
</p>
<p> Jewish leaders were skeptical of Jackson to begin with.
Sympathetic to the demand for a Palestinian homeland, Jackson
was borne aloft by Arabs shouting, "Arafat! Jackson!" on a
trip to the Middle East in 1979. He was also quoted as saying
that he was "tired of hearing about the Holocaust"--a comment
that he says was taken out of context. Today many Jewish leaders
are convinced that Jackson is anti-Semitic. Although Jews and
black leaders have had their differences--particularly on the
use of racial quotas, which are anathema to Jews but favored by
many blacks as a cure for historic discrimination--the two
groups have often worked together politically. Jewish voters,
for example, were supportive of black mayoral candidates in Los
Angeles, Chicago and Philadelphia. The conflict with Jackson
threatens to scuttle that affinity.
</p>
<p> The Republicans naturally hope that Jackson will drive
Jewish voters right out of the Democratic Party. Vice President
George Bush, acting in his role of G.O.P. stalking horse for
'84, was quick to condemn not only Farrakhan and Jackson but
Mondale and Hart, neither of whom made much of an issue of the
ethnic slurs in order to avoid offending black voters. Bush's
ploy was "a great political stroke," admitted a Mondale aide.
"It was simple, crude and effective."
</p>
<p> The Republicans are also counting on Jackson to push other
threatened whites into the G.O.P. column. Conservative Jesse
Helms even invokes Jackson's name in fund-raising solicitations
(in one letter, 24 times). Republican strategists predict that
Jackson will register more whites for the Republicans than
blacks for the Democrats. Each side aims to sign up about 2
million new voters, but that represents far more of a challenge
for blacks, since there are 49 million unregistered whites
compared with 7 million unenrolled blacks. Says Lamarr
Mooneyham, president of the North Carolina Moral Majority: "If I
could afford to pay Jesse, I'd bring him down here every month."
</p>
<p> Such a backlash would confirm the worst fears of many
mainstream black leaders, who feel that Jackson is ill-versed in
the delicate art of building interracial coalitions. Jackson has
never held an elected office. Whereas mayors like Young and
Bradley needed to court white votes to win elections, Jackson
has opted for confrontation, forging all-black protest blocs to
demand concessions. At Operation PUSH, he organized boycotts of
white businesses in order to win more contracts and jobs for
minorities. In the process he was able to wring concessions from
such companies as Anheuser-Busch, Coca-Cola and Kentucky Fried
Chicken. Another group under the PUSH umbrella is proving to be
a political liability in quite a different way. Last month
federal auditors demanded that PUSH-EXCEL return $708,431 of
over $3 million in U.S. Department of Education grants awarded
between 1978 and 1981. The Government claims that PUSH
authorities have failed to account for the money properly. Says
Jackson casually: "It's really a dispute between auditors and
accountants."
</p>
<p> By personality and disposition, Jackson is not a perfect
choice to make the first significant black bid for the
presidency. (He is not the first black candidate. Congresswoman
Shirley Chisholm ran for the Democratic nomination in 1972,
winning 152 delegates. Abolitionist Frederick Douglass won a
single, complimentary vote at the 1888 Republican Convention.)
He is frequently blustery, volatile and egotistical. But he is
the only black leader with the drive and audacity to mount such
an extraordinary political campaign. Revolutions of all
kinds--political, economic, social--are often led by rough-edged men,
and Jackson is unexceptional in their company. The established
order is invariably unnerved by firebrands with fiercely held
views, especially if those views stir the masses. The press is
equally "traumatized," says Jackson, who has grown cool to even
the black reporters who trail him. No longer does he indulge in
"Let's talk black talk" off-the-record sessions. "I don't trust
you all on that level," he tells black reporters he once
confided in.
</p>
<p> Jackson is better at inspiring hopes and dreams than he is
at designing specific programs to help the poor. His critics
are biting on this score. Says Elections Expert Richard
Scammon, a conservative Democrat: "Jesse Jackson is a black
George Wallace--a Rodney Dangerfield. He wants respect. It's
a scream for attention. He has no real program. He doesn't know
what he's doing." In private, one of Jackson's Democratic
rivals is almost as caustic. "There's still one speech Jackson
hasn't given yet," he says. "We still haven't seen his agenda."
</p>
<p> Jackson does have an agenda, which, like those of his
Democratic opponents, is constrained by the federal budget
deficit. He would raise $50 billion from a one or two-year
surtax ranging from 1% on incomes of $25,000 to 10% on incomes
over $90,000. He would save another $80 billion by cutting
defense outlays by 20%. But if Jackson reduces the deficit by
$70 billion, as he proposes, and fulfills his intention to
spend $50 billion to rebuild the nation's infrastructure
(roads, bridges, water systems, mass transit), he would have
only $10 billion left to fight poverty. That amount would not
come close to restoring the $25 billion cut from programs
affecting the poor by the Reagan Administration in 1981.
</p>
<p> Jackson's foreign policies are radically
non-interventionist, with a pro-Third World tilt. Like Hart and
Mondale, he favors a freeze on building and deploying nuclear
weapons. He would cut American military forces in Europe and
Japan in half over five years, arguing that allies should pay
for more of their own defense, which he says now costs the U.S.
$150 billion a year. Critics note correctly that his defense
planks would tempt Soviet adventurism, but Jackson dismisses
such talk as alarmist. To ease cold war tensions and revive
arms-control talks, he would "aggressively negotiate" with the
Soviets.
</p>
<p> A great believer in his own powers as a negotiator,
especially after arranging the release of downed Navy Lieutenant
Robert Goodman from Syria last January, Jackson wants to
establish a "dialogue" with Palestinian leaders on the issue of
an independent Palestinian state, which he advocates. "I've
always supported Israel's right to exist with security," Jackson
says. "But unless you can talk with adversaries, you cannot help
the ally." He would try to curtail U.S. investments in South
Africa, while increasing foreign aid to other African nations.
Jackson is unconvinced that Cuba and Nicaragua are fomenting
revolution in Central America. He favors "normalizing" relations
with the Marxist-led Sandinista regime in Nicaragua, which he
says is "on the right side of history," and withdrawing all
troops from the region. On the other hand, he does not rule out
sending U.S. troops to the Persian Gulf in the event of a Soviet
invasion, and he favors covert U.S. support of Afghan rebels
against the Soviets.
</p>
<p> Jackson has a vastly different world view than his
Democratic rivals. He says that he was "born in occupied
territory, having lived all my developing years under
apartheid." (He grew up in South Carolina.) His Third World
sympathies make him highly skeptical of U.S. involvement abroad
("too often we are aligned with the landed gentry, the dictator,
the oppressor"), and sometimes too forgiving of the excesses of
revolutionary causes. He condemns U.S. covert operations in
Central America as "a form of terrorism," but finds such lawless
regimes as Muammar Gaddafi's Libya and the Khmer Rouge in
Cambodia merely "distasteful."
</p>
<p> Jackson's real issue, the one he cares about most deeply,
is voting rights. Although Southern states have long since
stopped using literacy tests and police dogs to keep blacks from
voting, Jackson claims that they have found more subtle methods
of disenfranchisement. Most offensive to him is the "runoff
primary" system used in ten Southern states. If no candidate
wins a majority in a primary, the system forces a second,
runoff primary between the two leaders. Blacks can sometimes win
the first round, says Jackson, but usually not the second.
Without second primaries, he claims, the South would send 15
more blacks to state and local offices. He has made abolishing
dual primaries his "litmus test issue."
</p>
<p> His demand has puzzled some election experts, provoked
defiance by Southern party leaders, and struck fear in the heart
of the Democratic National Committee. The experts say that dual
primaries do not necessarily discriminate against blacks. A
study of nearly 200 state elections in Texas, for example, did
not disclose a single instance of a candidate's losing because
of his race or ethnicity. Georgia Democratic Party Chairman
Bert Lance says he is prepared to "go to the wall" to defend
the system. Party leaders have a more immediate concern: that
Jackson will angrily stalk out of the convention if his demands
are not met, taking with him the Democrats' chance to win back
the White House.
</p>
<p> That fear probably is exaggerated. Jackson sloughs it off
as "negative hype and speculation" by the media. Says he: "I
am not going to tear up the Democratic Party." He vows to be
a "healer," not a "spoiler." Last week he called on D.N.C.
Chairman Charles Manatt, and to Manatt's huge relief promised
that he would not bolt the party at the convention. He never
intended to, he says. The idea of a walkout was "Manatt's
magnificent obsession." It is in Jackson's interest to
compromise, and he knows it. If he wants to be the undisputed
leader of American blacks--his real goal, many believe, and
one that he is on the verge of attaining--he cannot afford to
be a renegade. He has to show that he can deliver black votes in
November, that he can put a Democratic President in his debt.
</p>
<p> At the same time, Jackson must show his black supporters
that he has exacted a price for his allegiance. In addition to
opposing second primaries, Jackson wants to change party rules
that hinder minority candidates by, for instance, requiring
that they win 20% of the vote in a congressional district to
qualify for delegates. Jackson points out that to date he has
won 17% of the popular vote, yet holds only 7% of the
delegates. Responding to Jackson's claim that he was "robbed"
of 220 delegates, Manatt promised to ask state chairmen to
consider allocating Jackson unpledged convention delegates.
Meanwhile, Jackson came up with another idea that could touch
off debate: automatic voter registration at the age of 18. Such
a system would demand a philosophical change in the U.S., where
voting is considered a privilege, not a requirement.
</p>
<p> Mondale--or Hart, if he should suddenly surprise--can
probably work out a deal with Jackson on most of his demands.
(Exception: his 20% defense cut, which neither of the major
candidates could even consider and which Jackson is unlikely to
press.) Last week the Jackson and Mondale camps worked in
private to come up with an overall compromise that both sides
could live with. It appeared possible that Jackson would agree
to abolishing dual primaries only where they can be proved
discriminatory, in return for changes at the local level, like
reapportioning local election districts, that could put more
blacks in state and city offices.
</p>
<p> Party leaders are still worried about how the deal will
look. If Mondale, say, seems to be snubbing Jackson, he risks
offending a very prideful man and losing black support. But if
he too eagerly embraces Jackson, he risks turning off large
slices of the white electorate. Says one Mondale fund raiser:
"The first question Jews ask me is whether Jesse Jackson is
going to be on the ticket as Vice President. The second question
is whether Jackson is going to have a Cabinet job." Jackson has
shown no interest in either, but that has not let Mondale off
the hook. Says Scammon: "If Mondale panders to Jackson at the
convention, white Southerners and white blue-collar workers
would turn away, in addition to the Jews."
</p>
<p> Both sides are eager to cut their deal in private, and
before the party faithful gather in San Francisco. Jackson could
lose leverage if Mondale locks up the nomination before the
convention, an increasingly likely prospect. As for Mondale, he
cannot afford to be seen on bended knee in public. To beat
President Reagan, the party needs a well choreographed but
restrained love feast. Says Texas Democratic Chairman Robert
Slagle: "I'm in absolute horror of a brokered convention. The
last thing we need this year is to be playing Let's Make a Deal
on national TV."
</p>
<p> Much depends on how Jackson handles himself in the weeks
ahead. If he is intemperate in his public utterances, if he
locks himself into unrealistic demands, he could wound the
Democratic nominee, discredit himself and further divide the
races. But if he reaches a rapprochement with the party's
candidate, then campaigns for him in a temperate and intelligent
way, Jackson could greatly enlarge the role of blacks in
national politics. In that way, Jesse Jackson's candidacy could
turn out to be a powerful and positive force, a reminder of the
diversity and promise of American politics.
</p>
<p>Jackson Speaks His Mind
</p>
<p> In conversations with TIME Correspondent Jack E. White
aboard a chartered plane during a hectic week of electioneering,
Jesse Jackson addressed some of the most pointed questions
raised by his unorthodox campaign. His views:
</p>
<p> On the sometimes sharp reaction to his candidacy.
"Whenever the prospect of change occurs, there is always the
inflamed and exaggerated response by the keepers of the gate of
the status quo. Many of them are still in shock at the success
of this campaign. They know that the course of American politics
is changing. They don't know quite where we'll go. So in their
panic, they lash out and attack. Every time there is a
breakthrough, the politics of paranoia takes over."
</p>
<p> On the threat by Nation of Islam Leader Louis Farrakhan
against Reporter Milton Coleman. "I immediately recognized it
as religious metaphor. But it was dangerous language because of
the ability to misinterpret it. I think it was more out of
naivete than meanness."
</p>
<p> On Farrakhan's contributions to the Jackson campaign. "He
has played a great role in helping to resurrect many people who
had politically died or dropped out. In New York, for example,
a large segment of the black community had a philosophy against
voting. When we marched in Harlem, there were huge numbers of
people who had never voted before; Farrakhan was a great factor
in making that happen."
</p>
<p> On his support among whites. "You don't get 13% of the vote
in Connecticut, with a 6% black population, with just black
votes. You don't get 13% of the vote in Arizona, 3% black, with
just black votes. This campaign has consistently attracted more
nonblack votes than Hart has attracted nonwhite votes."
</p>
<p> On his relationship with Jews. "A lot of Jewish people
relate to me on a cumulative score of our relationship across
the years. There is still a substantial number of Jewish people
who remember my standing with them in Skokie (Illinois) when
the Nazis threatened to march. Some others remember that in the
Middle East I called for a mutual-recognition policy. I've
always supported Israel's right to exist with security. But
unless you can talk with the adversaries, you cannot help the
ally."
</p>
<p> On being misunderstood by white listeners. "The language
of (black) culture grows out of our Christian faith. We gained
strength from biblical heroes and heroines...People who don't
understand my language--I am speaking English--are
culturally deprived...When I give the example of rocks lying
around and ask people to pick up their slingshots and throw
their rocks, I'm not talking about hitting somebody. Blacks
understand that I'm telling them to register and vote."
</p>
<p> On press coverage of his campaign. "I think that my
constituents see a rhythm of attacks and they reserve the right
to their own opinion without being unduly influenced by the
media's opinion of a given situation. I think that many black
people read the Washington Post and the National Leader and
they believe the National Leader. They read TIME and Jet and
they believed Jet. Blacks are developing more confidence in
their own frames of reference."
</p>
<p> On whether he might bolt the Democratic Party after the
convention. "For the record, we intend to stand our ground,
fighting to expand and heal the party. Our intention is to make
room in our party for locked-out people, for locked-out
Democrats. We're not going any place. I expect to support the
party's nominee, and I expect to be supported by the party's
nominee. There are more ways for us to realize justice and
fairness without threatening to pick up our marbles and go home
if we do not get everything that we want. We would lose our
influence, the struggle for directing the course of our party
and the race with Reagan if we did that."</p>
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