He subsequently
clerked for Judge
Marion S. Boyd of the
United States District Court for the Western District of Tennessee. He served in the
U.S. Army JAG Corps. Alexander practiced law in Memphis and Osceola, was a commissioner on the Arkansas Waterways Commission, and secretary of the Osceola Port Authority.
Congress He was elected as a
Democrat from
Arkansas's 1st congressional district in
1968, succeeding thirty-year incumbent
Ezekiel C. "Took" Gathings, who retired, and would subsequently be reelected eleven additional times. In the House, he served in the Democratic leadership as Chief Deputy Majority Whip from 1981 to 1987, and was a member of the
House Appropriations Committee, where he was active on issues involving agriculture, energy and foreign trade. In 1992, the
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette published a story accusing Alexander of misusing campaign funds, although these transactions were later found to be legal. Nonetheless, he was defeated for re-nomination by a wide margin by
Blanche Lambert (later to be known as Blanche Lincoln), a former staff assistant to Alexander, who went on to win the general election in November.
Retirement Alexander and his wife, Debi Alexander, today live in
Reston, Virginia. ==References==