Greetings! Hillary Clinton appeared at the Rainbow PUSH Coalition’s annual convention this week and delivered a pointed call for grassroots civil rights organizing over politician-led approaches.
Clinton joined Yusef Jackson – Rev. Jesse Jackson‘s son – at the first Rainbow PUSH convention held since Rev. Jackson’s passing. The occasion carried real historical significance. Rev. Jackson spent decades building Rainbow PUSH into one of the most prominent civil rights organizations in the country. He ran for the Democratic presidential nomination twice, in 1984 and 1988. His influence on American progressive politics stretched across generations. Rev. Jackson has since passed away, leaving the organization to carry on without the figure who defined it.
For those gathered at this year’s convention, his absence was the unmistakable backdrop to everything else. Yusef Jackson has stepped into a leadership role. The annual gathering continues as a touchstone for clergy, business leaders, and civil rights advocates.
On Instagram, Clinton described the event as an honor and framed the current moment as one of urgency. “We talked about the urgency of this moment in our country’s history, and the critical part each of us can play in righting its course,” she wrote.
Her core argument was direct. The movements that produced real change in American civil rights history weren’t led by elected officials. She credited clergy, civic organizers, and young people with actually driving them forward. Clinton put it plainly: “We don’t need to have a bunch of politicians leading this movement. We need it to be from the bottom up.”
That argument will land differently depending on the reader. Those who share her skepticism of top-down political leadership may see it as a historically sound case. Others may point to an inherent tension. Clinton has spent most of her adult life at the center of political power. She served as First Lady, U.S. Senator from New York, and Secretary of State. She was also the 2016 Democratic presidential nominee. That biography either bolsters or complicates her call. Fair-minded observers will weigh it differently, and both readings have merit.
Clinton closed with a phrase that carried unmistakable meaning in this setting. “Keep hope alive,” she wrote. Those three words are indelibly associated with Rev. Jesse Jackson. He used them throughout his civil rights career and during his presidential campaigns. They became one of his most recognizable expressions of purpose. Their reappearance here was clearly deliberate.
Clinton didn’t name a specific policy target or endorse a candidate. Her call was broader: reconstitute the kinds of movements that drove progress in earlier chapters of American history. “We can achieve so much by dreaming for better and coming together to reach for it,” she wrote.
What that reconstitution looks like in practice – and who steps up to lead it – she left as an open question.
This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider
