He heard the crack of the gun. Then saw the impact: blood gushing from the neck and jaw, the tie blown off. The date was 4 April 1968; the place was Memphis, Tennessee. Immediately, he raced upstairs to the balcony of the motel where Martin Luther King lay dying. As he told it, he cried out to him, cradling his head, letting his mentor’s blood pour over his clothes.
All King’s closest aides had rushed to help him, but it was he, Jesse Jackson, burning with grief and righteous anger, who flew back to his base in Chicago to appear on the “Today” show with King’s blood still on him. He told the audience that there had been a crucifixion: the man of love killed by hate, the man of peace killed by violence. He had been there. And for a certainty, he would also be there when resurrection came.
Other witnesses remembered King’s end differently. It hardly mattered. He knew he was the man with the energy, electricity and sublime preacher’s oratory to carry on where King had left the civil-rights cause. Fired by this persuasion, he carried on for half a century campaigning, protesting, motivating and getting under the skin of those who thought he was mostly serving himself. He was adamant that he was not. It needed a leader—someone with intelligence and courage, will, discipline, divine inspiration—to make King’s long arc of moral justice bend just that bit faster.

Twice, in 1984 and 1988, he ran for president, the first African-American man to do so for a major party. His platform was partly classic left-liberal: taxing the rich, cutting defence, and using the savings for social programmes. But he also had a glorious vision of an America where the disinherited and disrespected, the despised and rejected, were taken up, cared for and placed at the centre of national politics; where there was true equality of education and opportunity and abundant jobs; where the priority of government was to feed the hungry, clothe the naked and choose not the nuclear race, but the human race. Jesus’s Sermon on the Mount showed how the Democratic Party could revive itself this way, block by block, precinct by precinct. Vote by vote.
