U.S. House of Representatives
Elections Jackson's wife wanted him to run for the 2nd District Congressional seat in the 1996
primary election, The 2nd District includes part of
Chicago's southeast suburbs known as the
Southland and part of the
South Side. Jackson's father approached state Sen.
Alice J. Palmer with a deal in which the Jacksons would support her for Congress in exchange for her support for Jackson for the
Illinois Senate. Jackson Jr. did not agree with the plan and wanted to run for the 2nd District seat. on September 10, 1995, Jackson officially declared his candidacy. Jackson's opponents in the Democratic primary were Palmer,
Emil Jones,
Monique Davis, and John Morrow in the Democratic primary, which was set for November 29, 1995. Jones was endorsed by
Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. Jackson was endorsed by the
Daily Southtown,
Markham Mayor Evans Miller, and one local labor organization. Campaign controversy arose when it was revealed that Jackson's salary as field director the Rainbow Coalition had been subsidized by the
Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union, which was accused by a U.S. Senate investigative committee of having ties to organized crime. Jackson won the Democratic primary with 48% of the vote to Jones's 39%, with the rest of the votes scattered among the other three candidates. The Republicans nominated Thomas Somer. Since the district was overwhelmingly Democratic, Jackson was the favorite for the December 12, 1995 special election. Jackson won the general election with 76% of the vote; his victory was widely anticipated. Upon his victory, Jackson made it known he would be a liberal voice in opposition to
Speaker of the House of Representatives Newt Gingrich. Jackson was perceived as less charismatic than his father and less credentialed than his predecessor, but his family pedigree was expected to help him politically. As a result, Jackson received 94% of the vote in the general election. As he prepared to
run for president in 2000, Vice President
Al Gore attempted to maintain good relations with the Jackson family, hoping to discourage Jackson's father from running for president against him. Jackson received a congratulatory call from Gore after his election in 1995. In 1998, Gore campaigned for and advised Jackson, and went out of his way to instruct aides to create a vice presidential event in Jackson's district to boost Jackson. The 2nd District was overwhelmingly black when Jackson was first elected and remained so after the
redistricting process following the
2000 Census. Jackson won re-election in
2000 by a 90–10 margin over Robert Gordon. In 2001, the
Federal Election Commission ruled that Jackson could hire his wife on his campaign payroll as long as she was paid no more than the fair market value for her services. In 2002, Jackson was challenged in the Democratic primary by three candidates. Jackson claimed that state Sen.
William Shaw and his brother,
Cook County Board of Review Commissioner
Robert Shaw, had planted a bogus candidate in the primary race. The claim was that they selected 68-year-old retired
Robbins truck driver, Jesse L. Jackson, as an opponent in order to confuse voters and derail the congressman's re-election campaign. Jackson asked a Cook County court to question the Shaws and others under oath, but his effort was rejected and no criminal wrongdoing was found. As Jackson prepared to take further legal action, Jesse L. Jackson withdrew his candidacy after the unexpected deaths of his wife and grandson. Jackson won re-election in the
2004 House of Representatives elections by a wide margin over Stephanie Kennedy Sailor. In 2005, Jackson supported legislation that gave the
United States Federal Court of Appeals jurisdiction over the
Terri Schiavo case. In the
2006 election among Jackson's opponents was
Libertarian Party candidate and African-American pastor Anthony Williams, an outspoken opponent of immigration. Jackson won with 85% of the vote.
Tenure Jackson quickly built a track record of never missing a floor vote. After being elected, Jackson attempted to parlay his popularity into a seat on the
United States House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, using the leverage of his ability to perform
voter registration drives. In the
1996 elections, Jackson began to rival his father as a requested visitor to congressional districts with 36 requests from congressional colleagues. He was typically sent on the "black circuit" without any notification to the press when he campaigned for other candidates. In 1997, Jackson was criticized for offering mere disagreement with anti-Semitic remarks made by
Louis Farrakhan while he was in New York City for the mayoral race; Jewish leaders were unsatisfied by Jackson's response to Farrakhan. In 1997,
Newsweek mentioned Jackson in their list of 100 people to watch in the new century, dubbed "the Century Club", and raised the question of whether he would be the first black president. Jackson criticized the
Bill Clinton administration for working with Republicans and voted in dissent on several notable bills that were the products of compromise between Democrats and Republicans. He is also an opponent of incentives for corporations to invest in developing nations. He was outspoken on issues of minority hiring in information technology. Jackson voted against the
impeachment of Bill Clinton, voting against all four
articles of
impeachment considered by the House. In late 2000, as word spread that President-elect George W. Bush intended to appoint both
Colin Powell,
Condoleezza Rice and a third unnamed black to the
United States Cabinet, Jackson sought to prevent blacks from supporting Bush as Bush planned to reach out to blacks. Jackson partnered with Republican
Henry Hyde to push for a third Chicago airport. Jackson said Hyde was the right wing complement to his own left wing role in pursuing support for the airport. Jackson has withheld support for local Democrats who would not support the airport, such as 1998 Democratic gubernatorial nominee
Glenn Poshard. On January 6, 2001, Jackson and other members of the House of Representatives objected to counting the 25 electoral votes from
Florida which
George W. Bush narrowly won after a contentious
recount. Because no senator joined his objection, the objection was dismissed by Vice President
Al Gore, who was Bush's opponent in the
2000 presidential election. In 2004, Jackson supported the
Ho-Chunk tribe's proposal for a
casino within his district in
Lynwood, Illinois. The proposal was to build the largest casino in the state as part of an entertainment complex. In 2005, Jackson sponsored a bill for the creation and acquisition of a life-size
statue of
Rosa Parks to be placed in
Statuary Hall at the
United States Capitol. The bill approving the funding for the statue was signed by President Bush on December 1, 2005. After the 2004 elections, Jackson became vocal in supporting
election reform, disliking the way election rules differ across jurisdictions, saying that the U.S. "is founded on the constitutional foundation of 'states' rights'—50 states, 3,067 counties and 13,000 different election jurisdictions, all separate and unequal." He was one of the 31 House Democrats who voted to not count the 20
electoral votes from
Ohio in the
2004 presidential election, despite Republican President George Bush winning the state by 118,457 votes. He also proposed legislation for uniform voting standards that was supported by black leaders. Jackson and
Zach Wamp were spokespersons for the changing the name of the main hall of the
United States Capitol Visitor Center from the Great Hall to
Emancipation Hall. The
Library of Congress's main hall was already designated Great Hall. Some had wanted further feedback on naming possibilities, but the
United States House Committee on Appropriations approved the new name, and it passed the House. Jackson was one of the liberal leaders who supported a fixed timetable for Iraq troop withdrawals. In 2007, he has also co-sponsored (along with
Roy Blunt), legislation providing nearly $1 million to each family that lost someone to the
al-Qaida activities in the
1998 United States embassy bombings. In 2007 Jackson voiced an interest in initiating impeachment proceedings against President Bush for "crimes against the Constitution of the United States." In March 2011, Jackson attracted ridicule for a speech he made on the House floor proposing a constitutional amendment for "equal education rights", which he illustrated by proposing that every student in America receive an iPad from the federal government. In April 2011, Jackson spoke on the house floor, blaming the
iPad for "eliminating thousands of American jobs." In the February 27, 2007 Chicago municipal elections, Jackson's wife,
Sandi Jackson, won the election for
Alderman in Chicago's 7th ward. in
Denver, Colorado. Jackson gave a prime-time speech at the
2008 Democratic National Convention on August 25, 2008. During his speech he referenced
Martin Luther King Jr., stating, "I'm sure that Dr. King is looking down on us here in Denver noting this is the first political convention in history to take place within sight of a mountain top." Jackson said, "I know Barack Obama. I've seen his leadership at work. I've seen the difference he has made in the lives of people across Illinois." At the convention, Jackson started what was described as a "hugfest" in an attempt to unite the Illinois Democratic party, which had been squabbling internally. He started by hugging
Bobby Rush (who had been upset that Jackson's wife was being positioned for Rush's seat when Rush had been ill earlier in the year) and then he hugged
Debbie Halvorson, who had been at odds with him over the proposed airport. He then asked if anyone else was mad at him. At this point Mayor Daley jumped up to hug Jackson. Jackson then said, "I'm not going to be satisfied until I see
Rod Blagojevich give
Mike Madigan a hug." Before the entire Congress was charged with mitigating the
2008 financial crisis and the
Great Recession, Jackson proposed that the
United States Department of Agriculture increase the allotment of
food stamps. During the congressional debates on a federal bailout, Jackson worried about the viability of various plan iterations to his constituents. Although only two years earlier he spoke of
Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi in glowing terms, he could not support the late-September version of the legislation she was proposing because he felt it contained inadequate homeowner protections. Although he voted against the bill on September 29, 2008, he voted in support of the
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 on October 3, 2008. He later expressed concerns in a
New York Times op-ed article about the implications that the eventual bill had on enfranchisement due to the lack of protections for homeowners as it relates to voting rights. Jackson sponsored legislation to make the
Pullman District a
National Park Service jurisdiction. On April 21, 2012, Jackson held a symbolic groundbreaking for the proposed third airport.
Committee assignments •
Committee on Appropriations •
Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies •
Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Jackson was also appointed to the
Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission in 2003. He was among the scholars and politicians adding commentaries to
Lincoln in Illinois which was published by the Abraham Lincoln Association and the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation. The book had been expected in the fall but was published in June 2008.
Health issues On June 10, 2012, Jackson took a medical leave of absence from the House, citing exhaustion. On July 11, 2012, Jackson's office said he was being treated for a mood disorder at a residential treatment facility. His office denied speculation that he was being treated for alcoholism. On August 13, 2012, it was confirmed by numerous news outlets that Jackson was being treated for
bipolar disorder. ==Campaign fraud==