Rep. Jesse Jackson: Hubris vs. Humility

In her Chicago Sun-Times column, Laura S. Washington contemplates the re-election campaign of Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. in Illinois amid a federal probe and a U.S. House Ethics Committee investigation. The adversity has apparently humbled him, observers say. Washington, however, is not convinced. Suggested Reading Trump’s New ‘Gold Card’ Lets Immigrants Skip the Line, But…

In her Chicago Sun-Times column, Laura S. Washington contemplates the re-election campaign of Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. in Illinois amid a federal probe and a U.S. House Ethics Committee investigation. The adversity has apparently humbled him, observers say. Washington, however, is not convinced.

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Humility? That notion, quaint in today’s scorched-earth political arena, has emerged in U.S. Rep Jesse Jackson Jr.’s battle for his 2nd Congressional District seat.

I ran across a Feb. 28 opinion piece that nailed Jackson’s dilemma. Jackson ally and Park Forest Mayor John A. Ostenburg penned a candid commentary in the E-News Park Forest, a south suburban newsletter.

“Mention to almost anyone the name ‘Jesse Jackson, Jr.,’ and you will likely be met with a visceral reaction: pro or con,” Ostenburg wrote. Ostenburg went on to endorse his friend, noting, “Recently, I have seen a decidedly more humble Jesse Jackson, Jr.”

Humble?

“Triple J” has long been a lightning rod in his district, which stretches from Chicago’s South Side to the south suburbs to Kankakee. There are far more words than I have space to explain why. Jackson can be charismatic, calculating, brilliant, pugnacious, wily, ambitious, presumptuous, infuriating and boneheaded.

Be he ever so humble? Not the Jackson I know.

His supporters say he has secured hundreds of millions of dollars for the district, and they applaud his single-minded pursuit of economic development via a proposed south suburban airport.

Detractors argue that Jackson is distracted and disconnected. He’s all Big Hat, No Cattle, grasping and untrustworthy.

Back in the day, Triple J was riding high. He was once touted as a potential first black speaker of the U.S. House and for mayor of Chicago.

Read Laura S. Washington’s entire column at the Chicago Sun-Times.

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