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Manzullo ends 20-year tenure in Congress

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Don Manzullo’s last second representing Illinois’ 16th Congressional District was a second before noon Thursday. A second after noon, he had a new job.

“I had a two-second break,” he said.

Manzullo, the 68-year-old former Republican congressman, will draw upon his experience as the new president and CEO of the Korea Economic Institute of America.

Manzullo described KEIA as a not-for-profit policy institute that will “bring the countries together on economic and political issues.”

The institute states its mission as “to broaden and deepen understanding among Americans and Koreans about the U.S.-Korea alliance, the value of the two countries’ bilateral relationship, and the issues the two countries face.”

Manzullo has served on the Asia subcommittee in the House’s Committee on Foreign Affairs since he took office in 1993. For the past two years, he was chairman. Manzullo said he has always had an “intense interest” in Asia, and that he was asked to lead the organization.

The final vote Manzullo cast was “aye,” on the controversial legislation that would avert the “fiscal cliff” situation. As he watched the debate with Judy Biggert, an Illinois congresswoman also voted out of office in 2012, Manzullo said he was surprised by the toxic tone of the debate.

Manzullo described the runup to his final vote as being chaos.

“It wasn’t even controlled chaos. It was absolute, total chaos.”

He described the current partisanship gripping Congress as a social and structural problem. Many members, he noted, do not bring their families to Washington. As a result, they become commuters and strangers to each other.

“It’s an assembly of people who simply don’t know each other well enough to have a level of decency and disagree with each other while being decent,” Manzullo said.

Manzullo defeated Democratic incumbent John Cox in the 1992 election, and held the seat representing a section of northern Illinois until Thursday.

In 2011, Democratic state lawmakers redrew the state’s legislative districts, pitting a number of Republican incumbents against each other. Manzullo ran against U.S. Rep. Adam  Kinzinger, R-Manteno, in the Republican primary in March and lost.

Manzullo said he did not have words of advice for his successor, just rules of thumb to follow.

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