One of the more arresting moments in the presidential campaign came recently when Hillary Clinton had a spirited exchange with activists from Black Lives Matter. "Look, I don't believe you change hearts," Clinton said, when pressed about her support for their goals. "I believe you change laws, you change allocation of resources, you change the way systems operate."
In that instant, Clinton did not sound like a "Clinton Democrat" — at least not the kind her husband implied he was in the early 1990s when he emphasized the theme of "responsibility," and sternly told a black audience, "I cannot do for you what you will not do for yourself." Her words seemed more evocative of those used in 1984 by one of his adversaries, Jesse Jackson, who reminded voters how structural changes had come only through activism that had "ended American apartheid laws," "secured voting rights" and "obtained open housing."
Jackson, who is now 73, has quietly become part of the political landscape again. Recently, Clinton's chief rival at the moment, Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has been drawing the largest audiences in the Democratic presidential field, made a pilgrimage to Jackson's office. Sanders has been reminding reporters that he stumped for Jackson during both his presidential campaigns in 1984 and 1988 — the second time helping him win the Vermont primary.
This interest in Jackson might seem anomalous but in fact is long overdue. More than anyone else, he is the visionary of the current Democratic Party in its transition out of the 20th century and into the 21st.
The conventional wisdom says otherwise. Its account of the party's rebound from the defeats of the 1980s treats Jackson skeptically and gives the savior role to Bill Clinton. It's true that Clinton's appeals to working-class and middle-class voters — those "who work hard and play by the rules" — were effective in their time. The electorate was still overwhelmingly white (nearly 90 percent, compared with about 70 percent today), and Democrats were desperate to lure back those people who had defected from the party amid the upheavals of the 1960s and 1970s and voted for Republicans, beginning with Ronald Reagan in 1980.
Today the 1990s strategy sounds archaic, while Jackson's earlier appeal seems more closely in sync with where the party is now. Take, for instance, his speech at the 1984 Democratic National Convention, when he said of his Rainbow Coalition: "The Rainbow includes lesbians and gays. No American citizen ought be denied equal protection from the law."
The "from" is apt in the context of the issues that preoccupy today's progressives — police killings of young blacks; punitive laws that bar immigrants, even those who came to the U.S. as children, from attaining full citizenship; state and local ordinances that allow employers and landlords to discriminate against gay and transgender citizens; voter-registration restrictions in many states that seem aimed at minority populations.
Protection "from" such laws resonates in particular with millennials, who now form the nation's largest population cohort (more than 80 million), 43 percent of whom are nonwhite and 7 percent of whom say they are gay, bisexual or transgender. These are the constituents the eventual Democratic nominee will need to attract in 2016.