Home / Full timeline / Jesse Jackson addresses Democratic conventioneers, urging them to accept diversity as the measure of the party’s strength and character.
Jesse Jackson addresses Democratic conventioneers, urging them to accept diversity as the measure of the party’s strength and character.
1996 (Aug 27)
Civil rights leader Jesse Jackson told attendees at the Democratic National Convention that Republicans were putting forward an image of a "big tent." "On the cover was General (Colin Powell and (Republican vice-presidential nominee) Jack Kemp. But clearly you cannot judge a book by its cover. For inside, the book was written by (speaker of the House) Newt Gingrich and (Moral Majority leader) Ralph Reed and (former presidential hopeful) Pat Buchanan." In endorsing President Bill Clinton for a second term, Jackson called on Democrats to accept diversity as "the measure of the party's strength ... (and) character. We must find the bridge to keep our tent intact."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.