Fact Check

Did Jesse Jackson's family bar Obama from funeral? Here's the truth

With the exception of a brief rift in 2008, the two publicly maintained mutual respect. A family representative told Snopes the rumor was false.

by Taija PerryCook, Published Feb. 19, 2026


This image depicts the Rev. Jesse Jackson and former President Barack Obama in 2005.

Image courtesy of Getty Images


Claim:
Following the Rev. Jesse Jackson's death in February 2026, his family said they did not want former President Barack Obama at his funeral.
Rating:
Originated as Satire

About this rating


Following the Feb. 17, 2026, death of the Rev. Jesse Jackson — a Civil Rights icon characterized as the "living bridge" between the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and former U.S. President Barack Obama's generation — Obama published a statement thanking Jackson for a "lifetime of service." 

With the exception of a rift between Jackson and Obama in 2008 when Jackson apologized for derogatory comments he made regarding Obama when he didn't know his microphone was still on, the two publicly maintained mutual respect. However, following Jackson's death, detractors quickly claimed that Jackson's family had publicly said they did not want Obama present at Jackson's funeral.

One Facebook post (archived) received more than 31,000 reactions, with some users in the comments pointing to the 2008 incident as a possible reason for the alleged falling-out:

Image depicts a screenshot of a Facebook post claiming Jackson's family did not want Obama at his funeral.

(Facebook user America Loves Liberty)

The claim was not true, however. It originated on an satirical social media account, America Loves Liberty, that has a history of posting unfounded, misleading and false claims. "Nothing on this page is real," its bio read.

Snopes spoke via phone with Chinta Strausberg, Jackson's media representative, who asked his family whether the rumor about Obama being barred from the funeral was true. A member of the family responded: "Of course not."

The America Loves Liberty account appeared to be connected to another prolific social media account known for spreading satirical misinformation — America's Last Line of Defense. The account's bio also stated it was "an authorized dumping ground for used ALLOD material and other profitable right-wing propaganda."

ALLOD posted the same claim on Feb. 19, alleging that the Jackson's family attorney said, "Reverend Jackson was no fan of the former First Family." The claim then spread across multiple social media platforms.

If an attorney for Jackson's family had made such a public statement, major news media outlets likely would have reported on the incident. We searched for evidence of the quote and found only results related to similarly unofficial social media accounts repeating the false claim:

Image depicts Google search results of the keywords,

(Google)

Creators of such satirical content capitalize on social media users' willingness to believe and share the made-up stories, profiting from advertising revenue on external websites to which the posts link. (Snopes has previously reported on the business strategy.)

On Feb. 18, Jackson's family announced that his memorial services would begin the week of Feb. 23. On March 6, Obama attended a memorial for Jackson alongside former presidents Bill Clinton and Joe Biden. 

Snopes has debunked similar rumors stemming from ALLOD before. For example, we debunked a false story about the White House permanently banning CNN in February 2026 and a rumor that Bernie Sanders owed $1.6 million in taxes in December 2025.


By Taija PerryCook

Taija PerryCook is a Seattle-based journalist who previously worked for the PNW news site Crosscut and the Jordan Times in Amman.


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