Today, Rep. Robert Wexler (D-FL), a well-regarded young congressman with a good job and enough seniority to ensure that he is comfortable, will announce his resignation from the House of Representatives. The reason: he intends to perform other work in a "public policy" capacity. Initially, speculint (speculative intelligence) placed Wexler as the head of USAID at the State Department, or perhaps even as ambassador to Israel. But an administration official told reporters last night that, so far as he knows, Wexler wouldn't be joining the administration. Reports from South Florida
indicate that Wexler has decided to become the head of the Center for
Middle East Peace and Economic Cooperation. Sounds like an ordinary
think tank. A sinecure, even. Something fit for a 70-year-old, maybe -- but not
a 48-year-old guy in the prime of his legislative career. Indeed,
Democrats in Florida tried to recruit him to run in the Senate primary
against Kendrick Meek and believed that he had a good chance to beat
whichever Republican made it through. The institute he's joining is,
as the Jewish Telegraphic Agency
notes,
kind of "moribund." It was founded by Slim Fast magnate
F. Murray
Abraham (Apparently, S. Daniel Abraham founded Slim Fast, and F. Murray Abraham played Salieri.) but hasn't really done much over the past eight years. With
more money, it could become a potent charitable advocacy group, but it
would join at least a dozen others with roughly the same purpose.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2009/10/the-curious-resignation-of-robert-wexler/28368/