Son’s woes weigh on the Rev. Jackson

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In this May 8, 1988 file photo taken in Greensboro, N.C., Jesse Jackson (center) poses with his sons Jesse Jr. (left) and Jonathan at the Greensboro Coliseum after his sons graduated from North Carolina A&T. Jesse Jackson Jr. abandoned his congressional seat last week because of mental health problems and two federal investigations. (AP)
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He spent much of 2012 working on the issue of challenges to voter rights across the country. He also visited a Wisconsin Sikh temple after a fatal shooting. And he returned several times to join the workers’ protests in northern Illinois.

Jackson acknowledges the changes in his tactics, news coverage and the wider world.

“The whole landscape has changed,” he said. “The rules are different today.”

That includes the nation electing and re-electing its first black president, which Jackson has complicated feelings about. He says he has always supported Obama – having voted for him for state senator, U.S. senator and twice for president. But he also takes some credit for Obama’s success, saying his own two presidential campaigns made it possible.

During the 2008 campaign, Jackson was caught on tape making crude remarks about Obama supposedly talking down to blacks. He apologized. The night Obama was first elected, Jackson was in the crowd at Grant Park, tears streaming down his face.

Jackson maintains that his family’s legacy won’t be damaged by his son’s problems.

“We’ve served in this country” for decades, he said. “I don’t think people are that fickle.”

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Follow Sophia Tareen at http://twitter.com/sophiatareen .

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