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Rep. Jackson’s wife says he will remain on Nov. 6 ballot

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Ald. Sandi Jackson answers questions about the health of her husband, U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr. (D-Ill.) outside city council chambers, Wednesday, October 3, 2012, in Chicago Illinois. (Photo by Alex Garcia/ Chicago Tribune/MCT)

CHICAGO (MCT) — Alderman Sandi Jackson indicated Wednesday that voters might not see or hear from U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. before the Nov. 6 election, but said he would remain on the ballot with “no last-minute switcheroos.”

The veteran congressman has been on medical leave from Congress for nearly four months as seeks treatment for bipolar disorder. His wife, Chicago’s 7th Ward alderman, said that he is recuperating at the family’s Washington, D.C., home and seeing doctors two to three times a week. But Alderman Jackson could not say when Jackson would return to public life.

“I believe at some point in time he will come back. I don’t know whether that will be before the election or after the election,” she said.

Asked whether voters deserved to hear from the congressman before the election, Sandi Jackson said she “hopes he will be able to do that.

“Again, I know that he is anxious to do so, but he is also under doctor’s orders to stay very calm, very quiet, and he is going to do that. So we, right now, are going to continue to wait on the doctors to give us direction on how he should proceed,” said Alderman Jackson, speaking to reporters for the first time since she called the media “jackals” at a birthday fundraiser last week.

The Jackson campaign declined Wednesday to specify what treatment the congressman is receiving, where it’s taking place or what risks his doctors say he faces if he publicly campaigns.

The lack of answers has been the case throughout the summer and into the fall as speculation and misdirection have filled the void in the absentee congressman’s campaign.

Early last month, a top Jackson aide said he was “hopeful” Jackson would return to work when Congress resumed Sept. 10. He did not. The Jacksons also put their Washington, D.C., home on the market to help pay for the congressman’s mental health treatment. That created further questions about his future before the Jacksons pulled the public sale listing and are now offering it for private appointments.

Jackson, 47, faces two opponents in the general election: Republican Brian Woodworth, an adjunct faculty member at Olivet Nazarene University, and independent Marcus Lewis, a mail handler for the U.S. Postal Service.

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