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  • Wexler Leaves Congress, Washington Wondering Why

    WEXLER LEAVES CONGRESS, WASHINGTON WONDERING WHY
    Ron Kampeas

    Baltimore Jewish Times
    http://www.jewishtimes.com/index.php/jewisht imes/news/jt/national_news/wexler_leaves_congress_ washington_wondering_why/15116
    Oct 20 2009

    The "fire-breathing liberal" has sucked the air out of the room.

    A soft-spoken retirement announcement by the usually outspoken
    U.S. Rep. Robert Wexler (D-Fla.) has left Democrats, Republicans,
    Jews and non-Jews expressing reactions that ranged from baffled
    to... baffled.

    "We were stunned," said one source close to the congressional
    leadership. Figures in the pro-Israel community expressed similar
    sentiments.

    What makes the move even more perplexing is that Wexler, who dubbed
    himself the "fire-breathing liberal" in his manifesto published last
    year, is ending a very public political career that has had a virtually
    unimpeded upward swing to become a think-tank diplomat--the kind of
    figure who does his best work behind the scenes without taking credit.

    Wexler, 48, will lead the Center for Middle East Peace and Economic
    Cooperation, a group co-founded by S. Daniel Abraham, the Slim-Fast
    diet food magnate whom Wexler named in his book as a "close friend"
    and the funder of Wexler's Middle East travel in the past.

    The group has existed since 1993 and was prominent during the heyday
    of the Oslo peace process launched that year, but it has been moribund
    since the death in 2002 of its co-founder, former Utah congressman
    Wayne Owens.

    "Taking over as president of the Center for Middle East Peace offers
    me an unparalleled opportunity to work on behalf of Middle East peace
    for an important and influential non-profit institute," Wexler said
    in a statement. "After much discussion with my family, I have decided
    that I cannot pass up on this opportunity."

    The problem with his explanation is that the congressman, who was
    unavailable for an interview, already is in a position to exert
    considerable influence on Middle East policy.

    As chairman of the Europe subcommittee of the U.S. House of
    Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, Wexler lobbied European
    nations to join in isolating Iran isolation and helped sustain
    Israel's role as a NATO satellite country. He was effective, too,
    in bringing Turkey into the process as a Mideast broker.

    Wexler was the first major Jewish political figure to join the
    Obama campaign, in 2007, just after the then-senator had declared
    his candidacy. Obama's political mastermind, David Axelrod--now a
    senior White House adviser--advised his candidate to woo Wexler
    as the iconoclast likeliest to break Hillary Rodham Clinton's
    then-stranglehold on Jewish support.

    With a stand-up comic's hands-in-the-pocket, cards-on-the-table
    demeanor, Wexler ventured during the campaign into redoubts of Jewish
    support for Clinton such as Ohio. Thrown into a grind of twice-daily
    appearances, Wexler would loosen up the audience with jokes about
    how refreshing it was to address voters about a half-century younger
    than the average age in his Florida constituency before launching
    into a vigorous defense of Obama's emphasis on diplomacy to rebuild
    America's reputation abroad.

    "When that new day of trans-Atlantic relations emerges, Israel too
    will be a great beneficiary," he told a crowd in Cleveland.

    Some voters who were skeptical about Obama before Wexler's presentation
    said afterward that he won them over.

    Much was made in the weeks before last year's election of the supposed
    reluctance of Florida's elderly Jews to back a black candidate whose
    middle name was Hussein. Obama won Florida handily, and the problems
    likely were overstated, but Wexler earned credit for tirelessly
    working the state's retirement homes, where he is beloved.

    Wexler has commanded respect from Jewish liberals and centrists by
    combining support for robust U.S. diplomacy in pursuit of a two-state
    solution with a strong defense of Israel's response to Hamas rocket
    attacks, steering clear of criticizing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
    Netanyahu's policies and arguing that Obama needs to do a better job
    of selling his policies directly to the Israeli public.

    So why would Wexler give up such precious political capital?

    In the absence of a more detailed explanation, journalists and
    policymakers who thought they knew Wexler could only speculate: He was
    positioning himself for an Obama administration peace-brokering role.

    After 14 years he had tired of the congressional grind. The most
    common reason proffered was that he needs the money (the lawmaker
    has three children who attend a pricey Jewish day school).

    Wexler, reached by The Associated Press, said nothing exciting was up.

    "I am not under any investigation. My marriage is intact. My health
    is good and, thank God, the health of my family is good," he said. "I
    am leaving to become the president of the Center for Middle East Peace.

    It may not be as sexy as some other things, but this is what I'm
    doing."

    The only episode approaching a scandal in recent years reinforces
    the notion that Wexler is eager for a change: An opponent discovered
    in 2008 that the Delray Beach residence Wexler listed as his was in
    fact his in-laws'.

    This, it turns out, was not illegal, but in the course of the reporting
    it became clear that Wexler prefers his Washington-area community in
    suburban Potomac, Md., where he and his family attend Beth Sholom,
    an Orthodox synagogue.

    Wexler is perhaps one of the most unabashed Jews in Congress; he
    does not hide his affiliations. His wife, Laurie, has worked for the
    American Jewish Committee. Stumping in the tiniest of far-flung towns
    during Obama's campaign, he had an unerring scent for whatever local
    deli was selling Jewish--or at least Jewish-style--fare.

    In his book, he gleefully joined his liberalism and his advocacy for
    Israel into pugnaciousness.

    Wexler describes in his book a contentious Abraham-funded visit to
    Saudi Arabia and other Arab nations three weeks after the Sept. 11,
    2001 attacks and his growing impatience with Arab leaders who tried to
    persuade him that the U.S.-Israel alliance was to blame for terrorism.
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