Civil rights leader and Bill Clinton adviser Vernon Jordan dies at 85
Published Date: 3/2/2021
Source: axios.com
Vernon Jordan, the Civil Rights Movement pioneer who served as a close adviser to former President Clinton, died on Monday evening, CNN reports. He was 85.
Why it matters: The former National Urban League president was influential in American politics — from his service in President Lyndon B. Johnson’s civil rights conference to his position in leadership at the NAACP.
- He was best known for his close friendship with then-President Clinton, to whom he served as an informal adviser.
- He successfully sued the University of Georgia for its admission policies, saying they discriminated on the basis of race.
What they're saying: "His powerbroker persona is most manifest in his decades-long friendship with Bill and Hillary Clinton," wrote Financial Times in a 2018 profile of Jordan. "To jaded voters on the left and right, he is the ultimate Washington insider, a man whose seamless waltz between business and politics has fueled resentment at an incestuous system."
"Yet his successes in the boardroom and the smoke-filled backroom have, by now, obscured a distinguished role in the civil rights movement — and an upbringing in the segregated Deep South. Born into a world that had little use for his talents, Vernon Jordan would make himself indispensable."
Sujeet Indap on Vernon Jordan for FT (subscription)