Jesse Jackson: Minorities face 'hostile climate'
/Blacks and Latinos must work
together to overcome a "hostile climate" for minorities and the working
class, Black civil rights icon Rev. Jesse Jackson said Friday. Forty
years after Congress passed the Voting Rights Act, Blacks and Hispanics
still are targeted by voter suppression tactics and both face the same
challenges that lead to dead ends, he said in a meeting with The
Republic's Editorial Board. These include: woefully high dropout rates
and poor access to capital, health care and affordable housing. Too
many minorities are locked up in the justice system and locked out of
corporate boardrooms, politics and education because of it, he said.
"Why is it that in settings (on the baseball diamond and basketball
arenas) that Blacks and Hispanics play so well together," said Jackson,
in the Valley for a charity fund-raiser to benefit HIV/AIDS victims
here and in African nations. "The playing field is even and the rules
are public and the goals are clear. All we really need is an even
playing field." The inequality persists at the polls, said Jackson,
founder and president of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition and longtime
advocate for equal voting rights for minorities here and in countries
around the world. Jackson, an outspoken critic of President Bush's
administration and the war in Iraq, believes widespread voting fraud
took place in the presidential election here and drew parallels to
Iraq's first democratic election in nearly half a century. Jackson
partly blames a hodgepodge of state rules and voting systems for
"schemes of massive fraud in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Florida. "We are
fighting for a democracy in Iraq that we don't have here," said
Jackson, who in 1984 and 1988 sought the Democratic presidential
nomination. "We have soldiers dying for democracies in Baghdad that
they do not have in South Carolina. I long for the day we will have the
same civil rights . . . as Iraq." [more]