Megyn Kelly’s sharp criticism of Joe Biden’s Jesse Jackson eulogy has ignited a debate over political propriety at funerals, spotlighting Biden’s communication challenges and the enduring complexities of his relationship with the late civil rights leader.
The funeral of civil rights giant Rev. Jesse Jackson on March 8, 2026, was intended as a solemn celebration of a life dedicated to racial justice and Democratic activism. Instead, it became a flashpoint in the nation’s ongoing political culture wars, thrusting former President Joe Biden and commentator Megyn Kelly into a contentious public exchange that reveals deeper tensions about the boundaries of political speech in moments of mourning.
Jackson, who passed away on February 17, 2026, at age 84, was a towering figure in American history—a two-time presidential candidate, founder of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, and a key architect of the modern civil rights movement. His funeral in Chicago attracted a who’s who of Democratic politics, including Biden and former President Barack Obama. According to widespread reporting, the Jackson family had privately requested that speakers avoid overt political commentary, seeking a service focused on Jackson’s spiritual and personal legacy.
The Deliberate Breech: Political Remarks at a Family’s Request
Both Biden and Obama, however, incorporated pointed political references into their eulogies. Biden’s remarks, captured in full by CBS News, highlighted his decades-long, often contentious relationship with Jackson. “We had very different backgrounds, in some cases even different views, but never on race,” Biden stated, acknowledging their “toe to toe” disagreements while praising Jackson’s “passion” and “courage.”
While framed as a personal tribute, the speech inevitably touched on the current political landscape, with Biden drawing implicit contrasts between Jackson’s activism and the contemporary climate. This did not sit well with many observers, most vociferously with Megyn Kelly. On the March 10 episode of The Megyn Kelly Show, she launched a scathing two-pronged attack: first, on the breach of the family’s wishes, and second, on Biden’s personal capacity.
“Go Back to Your Basement and Your Pudding”: Kelly’s Personal Jab
Kelly’s critique escalated from a policy complaint to a deeply personal rebuke. “He had been asked not to do this by the family of the deceased, and yet…” she began, before delivering her now-viral line: “No one can understand a word you’re saying, sir. Go back to your basement and your pudding.”
This remark was a calculated triple entendre. It attacked Biden’s well-documented speech clarity issues, his age (Biden is 82), and a persistent right-wing caricature of him as a frail, basement-dwelling figure. The “pudding” reference specifically evokes claims that Biden is too old and disconnected to lead. Kelly’s commentary, reported by Mandatory, exemplifies how a funeral can be weaponized for broader political and generational warfare.
Kelly also defended Jesse Jackson Jr., who had publicly called out Biden for the political tone, framing her support as a stand for the family’s explicit wishes over political grandstanding.
Why This Matters: The Necropolitics of the 2026 Landscape
The controversy transcends a simple spat between a pundit and a former president. It illuminates three critical fault lines in contemporary American life:
- The Sanctity of Funeral Wishes: The Jackson family’s reported request highlights a growing anxiety that high-profile funerals are increasingly co-opted as political platforms. The backlash suggests a public yearning for moments of pure remembrance, untethered from campaign messaging.
- Biden’s Vulnerability on Age and Acuity: Kelly’s “pudding” jab didn’t happen in a vacuum. It taps into the single most persistent critique of Biden’s presidency: his perceived mental and physical decline. Using a solemn occasion to reinforce this narrative is a tactic with significant political risk, especially as speculation about a potential 2024 rematch with Donald Trump intensifies.
- Media Ecosystem Fragmentation: The story broke and evolved across niche outlets like Reality Tea and Mandatory before reaching mainstream cable news. This fragmentation means narratives like Kelly’s “pudding” line can gain traction in sympathetic media ecosystems before being contextualized or challenged by more traditional news sources, creating parallel realities of interpretation.
Historical Context: A Relationship Defined by Toe-to-Toe Disagreement
Biden and Jackson’s bond was uniquely American: a white working-class senator from Delaware and a Black radical minister from Chicago, allied yet often in friction. Their history dates to the 1980s, when Jackson’s presidential runs pushed the Democratic Party leftward on issues of race and poverty, positions Biden sometimes resisted.
Biden’s eulogy tried to own this history, framing their disagreements as a testament to Jackson’s strength. “What I actually admired most about Jesse was his passion,” Biden said. However, in the emotionally raw setting of a funeral, that historical nuance was easily lost, replaced by a perception of political exploitation. The incident forces a question: can the complex, often fraught, relationship between Black political leaders and white liberal allies be appropriately honored in a public eulogy without veering into contemporary political score-settling?
Fan (Public) Reaction: A Nation Divided Along Predictable Lines
Social media responses fell into familiar camps. Critics of Biden echoed Kelly’s sentiment, sharing memes of Biden seeming disoriented and amplifying the “pudding” metaphor. Supporters accused Kelly of heartless cruelty and defended Biden’s speech as a heartfelt, if politically aware, tribute to a man who was political to his core.
The Jackson family’s official stance remains privately communicated, but Jesse Jackson Jr.’s public callout signaled internal friction. This private-public divide is key: the family’s desire for a non-political service was overridden by the politics implicit in the lives of the speakers themselves. The public debate, therefore, is not just about decorum but about who gets to define Jackson’s legacy—his family or the political establishment he helped build.
The Road Ahead: Implications for 2026 and Beyond
The episode is a stark reminder that for Biden, every public appearance is a referendum on his age and stamina. A funeral, a setting where vulnerability is expected, becomes a high-wire act. Opponents will now scrutinize every ceremonial pause and verbal slip, framing them as evidence of incapacity.
For the Democratic Party, it raises a strategic dilemma: how to honor icons like Jackson without alienating a base sensitive to perceived elder abuse, while also satisfying a historical imperative to connect civil rights struggles to current political battles?
Megyn Kelly, for her part, has re-centered her brand around combative, anti-establishment commentary. This incident provides a perfect case study: blending a policy critique (disrespecting the family’s wishes) with a personal, ageist insult (“pudding”). It’s a formula that resonates deeply with her audience and guarantees sustained attention.
The Final Word: A Failure of Ritual in a Hyper-Political Era
Ultimately, the Jesse Jackson funeral should have been a capstone on a remarkable life. Instead, it became another skirmish in the infinite political campaign. Biden’s error was in failing to rigorously separate his personal affection from his political messaging, ignoring the family’s clear desires. Kelly’s error was in using the moment for a gratuitously personal attack that dishonored the solemnity of the occasion while cynically trading on ageist tropes.
The tragedy is twofold: Jackson’s legacy is momentarily overshadowed by political theater, and the public’s trust in the authenticity of our civic rituals—from funerals to eulogies—erodes further. In a nation starved for moments of unity, the funeral of a unifier like Jesse Jackson became just another proof point for our divisions. This is the defining pathology of politics in the mid-2020s: no space, not even death, is safe from the partisan battle.
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