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Knowing when to quit

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Good for him:

Representative Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat who has been one of Congress’s leading liberal voices for three decades, will not seek re-election next year, heeding a call for generational change roiling his party.

The decision will mark the close of a 34-year congressional career that put Mr. Nadler at the center of major civil rights battles and three presidential impeachments. It will also almost certainly touch off a crowded primary fight over a rare open Democratic seat in the heart of Manhattan.

In a recent interview in his downtown Manhattan office, Mr. Nadler, 78, said he hesitated to step aside when he believes that President Trump is threatening the foundations of democracy. But he said he had been persuaded it was time for a changing of the guard.

“Watching the Biden thing really said something about the necessity for generational change in the party, and I think I want to respect that,” Mr. Nadler said, adding that a younger successor “can maybe do better, can maybe help us more.”

Between RBG, Biden, and the multiple unnecessary House vacancies one would hope that this will become the new norm, but motivated reasoning can be a hell of an etc. Still, I hope more prominent Democrats start to realize that “was a good and effective public official for a long time and then gracefully ceded power” is a much better legacy than, say, “delivered the Republican Party a decades-long Supreme Court supermajority.”

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