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josh4
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Dec 2003
Location: New York City
Cabinet shakeup begins

Ashcroft, Evans resign from Cabinet
Officials: Attorney general will leave when successor confirmed
http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS...ions/index.html

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- In the first signs of a second-term shakeup for the Bush administration, Attorney General John Ashcroft and Commerce Secretary Don Evans have resigned, the White House announced Tuesday evening.

Ashcroft's resignation will become effective upon confirmation of a successor, Justice Department officials said. There were no immediate details on when Evans' resignation would take effect.

Ashcroft, a former senator and two-term governor of Missouri, has garnered criticism during his nearly four years as attorney general on issues like the Patriot Act, which backers say helps the government in its fight against terrorism and critics say infringes on civil liberties.

In July, Ashcroft released a progress report and said the Patriot Act "saves lives" and was "al Qaeda's worst nightmare." Portions of the law are set to expire in December 2005.

His confirmation hearing in January 2000 was filled with sharply divided debate. Ashcroft's critics highlighted his longstanding conservative political and religious views -- especially his anti-abortion stance.

Yet those views have also made him a favorite of many on the right, especially religious conservatives.

Eventually the Senate voted 58-42 for his confirmation -- an usually narrow margin for confirming a Cabinet official.

Ashcroft was treated for gallstone pancreatitis in March, and his recovery kept him out of the office for nearly a month. In his handwritten resignation letter, dated November 2, he told Bush the job has been "both rewarding and depleting." (Text of resignation letter)

"I believe that the Department of Justice would be well served by new leadership and fresh inspiration," he said. "I believe that my energies and talents should be directed toward other challenging horizons."

In a statement from the White House, Bush said Ashcroft "has worked tirelessly to help make our country safer" and "served our nation with honor, distinction, and integrity."

"During his four years at the Department of Justice, John has transformed the department to make combating terrorism the top priority, including making sure our law enforcement officials have the tools they need to disrupt and prevent attacks," Bush said.

Evans, who served as Bush's campaign chairman in 2000, is a longtime friend and one of the president's closest advisers. In his resignation, dated Tuesday, he congratulated Bush on last week's election results but said he concluded "with deep regret that it is time for me to return home."

"It is a blessing to have served America with such an extraordinary leader and a true friend," he said. (Text of resignation letter)

In response, Bush called Evans "one of my most trusted friends and advisers" and "a valuable member of my economic team."

"Don has worked to advance economic security and prosperity for all Americans. He has worked steadfastly to make sure America continues to be the best place in the world to do business," the president said.

President Bush met with his Cabinet on Thursday and held a news conference later that day. At that time Bush said he had yet to make any decisions about replacements for any people who resigned.

"I don't know who they'll be," he said. "It's inevitable. There'll be some changes. It happens in every administration."

Bush said Thursday that he was proud of every member of the Cabinet and his staff, and that he understood that they had exhausting jobs and made many family sacrifices.

Old Post Nov-10-2004 01:36  United States
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icyhandofcrap
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Jan 2004
Location: Cali

Woohoo! Maybe we can get a politically moderate, non religious-nutjob in.

From Yahoo News:
quote:
Ashcroft, in a five-page, handwritten letter to Bush, said, "The objective of securing the safety of Americans from crime and terror has been achieved."


Wait, really? I thought Mr. Bush himself said we may never win the war on terror (though he quickly made contrasting statements the next day during a veteran stump speech)?

Well, at least our Boobies on D.C. statues will be safe.


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Old Post Nov-10-2004 06:27  United States
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Spacey Orange
still loves trance.



Registered: Jul 2004
Location: California
Bush Picks Gonzales as New Attorney General

Reuters

quote:
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Bush has picked White House legal counsel Alberto Gonzales, a trusted adviser from Texas and prominent Hispanic, as his new attorney general, and planned to announce it on Wednesday, administration officials said. . .


There will be a fight over this nominee because may have stated in an opinion that the US did not have to oblige by the Geneva Convention. I'll try to keep an eye on this one. I guess this takes him out of there running for a US SpCt vacancy.


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Old Post Nov-10-2004 18:33  United States
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Renegade
____________/



Registered: May 2001
Location: Prague, Czech Republic

Can someone find me some sort of profile detailing what this guy does and does not stand for? I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt, but from what little I could garner from news sites and the Whitehouse page he seems like a conservative Christian who's backed Bush and Cheney's stonewalling on several issues as well as the continued, enforced (and illegal) incarceration of the individuals in camp X-Ray. Any chance that he's gonna be better than Ashcroft, or am I asking for too much?


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Old Post Nov-10-2004 18:54  Australia
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josh4
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Dec 2003
Location: New York City
Re: Bush Picks Gonzales as New Attorney General

quote:
Originally posted by Spacey Orange
Reuters

There will be a fight over this nominee because may have stated in an opinion that the US did not have to oblige by the Geneva Convention. I'll try to keep an eye on this one. I guess this takes him out of there running for a US SpCt vacancy.


Thats also a move to secure the hispanic vote for republicans. I have to hand it to them, the Bush administration may be insane but they're not stupid.

Old Post Nov-10-2004 18:55  United States
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Spacey Orange
still loves trance.



Registered: Jul 2004
Location: California

quote:
Originally posted by Renegade
Can someone find me some sort of profile detailing what this guy does and does not stand for? I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt, but from what little I could garner from news sites and the Whitehouse page he seems like a conservative Christian who's backed Bush and Cheney's stonewalling on several issues as well as the continued, enforced (and illegal) incarceration of the individuals in camp X-Ray. Any chance that he's gonna be better than Ashcroft, or am I asking for too much?


Here some biographical info. I'll try to get more info later.

quote:
1955 - Born August 4, in San Antonio, Texas. He was raised in Houston with 7 brothers and sisters.
1973-1975 - Served in the US Air Force.
1975-1977 - Attended the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado
1979 - Recieved his B.A from Rice University in Houston, Texas
1982 - Juris doctor (law degree) from Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts
1982-1995 - Joined the Houston law firm of Vinson & Elkins L.L.P. as an associate -- eventually became partner.
1985-1991 - Director, Big Brothers and Sisters
1989-1993 - Director, Catholic Charities, Houston, Texas
1990-1991 - President, Houston Hispanic Bar Association
1990-1991 - President, Houston Hispanic Forum
1990 - Special Legal Counsel, Houston Host Committee, Summit of Industrialized Nations
1992 - Assistant Legal Counsel, Houston Host Committee, 1992 Republican National Convention
1991-1994 - Director, State Bar of Texas
1992-1993 - Chairman, Republican National Hispanic Assembly of Houston
1993-1994 - Director, United Way of the Texas Gulf Coast
1993-1994 - President, Leadership Houston
1994 - Chair, Commission for District Decentralization of the Houston Independent School District
1995-1997 - General Counsel to Governor George W. Bush
1997-1999 - Secretary of State, State of Texas
1999-2000 - Justice, The Supreme Court of Texas
2000- - White House Counsel for George W. Bush


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Old Post Nov-10-2004 20:10  United States
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ResonantDrag
BeanAddict



Registered: Mar 2001
Location: just visiting

Vinson & Elkins L.L.P... wasn't enron one of their clients?



hey, i'm to the point where anyone should be better than ashcroft. back to the damn "lesser of two evils" hole for me

Old Post Nov-11-2004 04:25  United States
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PeacefulWarrior
aDdiCtEd to cHUnKy bEaTs



Registered: Jul 2002
Location: Boulder, Colorado

quote:
Originally posted by Renegade
Can someone find me some sort of profile detailing what this guy does and does not stand for? I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt, but from what little I could garner from news sites and the Whitehouse page he seems like a conservative Christian who's backed Bush and Cheney's stonewalling on several issues as well as the continued, enforced (and illegal) incarceration of the individuals in camp X-Ray. Any chance that he's gonna be better than Ashcroft, or am I asking for too much?


Anything seems better than 4 more years of Ashcroft, but supposedly Gonzales is Bush's token cabinet member to please the Democrats. Not sure if I buy that. However, Gonzales has pissed of the religious right by allowing a 17-year-old pregnant woman to abort her fetus during the second trimester, despite a state law signed by Bush when he was governor that required parental notification in most cases. Whatever he does, he's still a conservative and very close to Bush.

quote:

It's widely recognized that the Bush administration has more Reaganites in it than the Reagan administration itself had. Nowhere is this more true than in the administration's legal team. Never have a Justice Department and a White House counsel's office had more lawyers committed to a conservative view of the proper role of judges. It's a talented and well-credentialed crew, too. But it is also operating under severe political constraints. So it remains in doubt whether the administration will nominate a conservative for the Supreme Court when it has a chance. The fact that White House counsel Alberto Gonzales tops most people's lists of likely nominees does nothing to resolve the mystery.

Gonzales was raised, with seven siblings, in a two-bedroom house in Houston. His mother had a sixth-grade education, four grades better than his father. After high school, he went to the Air Force Academy. While there, he decided he wanted to be a lawyer. He finished college at Rice, then went to Harvard Law. He became a corporate lawyer at a prestigious Houston firm. In 1995, George W. Bush, just elected governor, made Gonzales his counsel. Appointing Gonzales to office seems to have become a habit for Bush: He has since served as the secretary of state for Texas, a justice on the Texas supreme court, and now White House counsel. As Bush has said, "In many ways, Al embodies the American dream."

When Gonzales took his latest job, conservative lawyers in Washington were wary, even suspicious. Partly this was because he was not part of their inbred world. But Gonzales also had more of a reputation as a Bush loyalist than as a conservative. During his short time on the bench, he was considered a relative moderate-relative, that is, to Texas legal politics-and some of his votes deeply angered pro-lifers.

But Gonzales has moved quickly and effectively to allay conservatives' concerns. First, he staffed his office with highly regarded conservatives, including former clerks to Clarence Thomas and former aides to Kenneth Starr. He picked Timothy Flanagan, a conservative and Justice Department veteran, as his deputy. "This is the most overqualified White House counsel's office in history," says one conservative observer, who has consequently "gone 180" about Gonzales.

The administration has appointed conservatives to the Justice Department, too. Attorney general John Ashcroft is conversant with, and supportive of, conservative legal theories. Ted Olson, a member of the conservative intelligentsia, will be solicitor general; John Manning, a former Scalia clerk, will head the office of legal counsel (OLC).

A further Gonzales move has also gone a long way to dispel doubts about him: ending the American Bar Association's official role in judicial nominations. The ABA will still weigh in on nominations once they are sent to the Senate. But the administration has sent an important signal that it will not kowtow to the liberal legal establishment. Gonzales won high marks for sending the ABA a tough but civil letter informing it of the decision. And he did it even though there were risks to him: Presumably the ABA will remember this episode if he is nominated to the federal bench.

Gonzales's office has been working fast on judicial picks. The administration will probably announce several nominees in late April. Conservatives are going to be elated by them. University of Utah professor Michael McConnell, a leading critic of strict-separationist dogma on church-state relations, may get a position on the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals. It's been reported that conservative congressman Chris Cox will be appointed to the Ninth Circuit. Federalist Society favorites such as Jeff Sutton and Peter Keisler are being talked up (for the Sixth and Fourth Circuits, respectively).

The high quality of this first round of judges reflects how much the supply of conservative lawyers has expanded over the last two decades. But it also reflects a careful and determined effort by the counsel's office. Early on, it gave senators the word that they would not be playing a large role in the selection of appeals-court judges: Appointments were going to be made to change the judiciary, not to dispense favors.

The White House also avoided the "stealth candidate" strategy that had produced the Supreme Court nomination of David Souter in the administration of Bush's father. Souter was picked because he wasn't vulnerable to criticism: Nobody knew what his judicial philosophy was. He ended up becoming one of the most liberal members of the Court. This time, the judge-pickers are looking for evidence that the people they plan to nominate share their general views. Being a member of the Federalist Society, or having a conservative track record as a judge, helps. So does being a woman or a black or Hispanic person-although philosophy and talent are considered more important. Finally, the administration is looking for youth: It wants to nominate people in their 40s, who will be on the bench for a while.

But no matter how stellar Bush's nominees are, confirming them is going to be difficult. Bush's administration may be more conservative than Reagan's, but the Senate he's dealing with is less so. The southern Democrats who voted for Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas are long gone, and their counterparts today are more prone to vote with their party. Northeastern Republicans, meanwhile, will not necessarily vote for conservative nominees.

Most Republicans expect at least one big judicial-nomination fight this year. If Chief Justice William Rehnquist or Justice Sandra Day O'Connor steps down-and speculation about whether one or the other will is at a boil right now-the abortion-rights and civil-rights activists are bound to mobilize against any replacement. As the vote on Ashcroft's nomination showed, the activists will bring most of the Democrats with them. If there is no vacancy on the high court, they'll find an appeals-court nomination to go ballistic over. They need an emotional battle with the administration to keep their troops happy and their donations coming. In this charged environment, getting a conservative with a paper trail on the Supreme Court is going to be very hard.

Hence the appeal of nominating Gonzales, who doesn't have much of a paper trail. Clint Bolick, a libertarian legal activist, says that his public-interest law firm, the Institute for Justice, has "looked at his judicial record fairly carefully, as I'm sure other groups have done." He continues, "Unfortunately, the range of issues dealt with by the Texas supreme court is very narrow. Justice Gonzales seemed to have positions that were sympathetic to business interests and that seemed to be relatively conservative, but there's just not a big record there."

For social conservatives, the black marks against Gonzales are his votes last year on a series of abortion cases. After years of debate, Texas had passed a law requiring parents to be notified if minors were procuring abortions. As in most such laws, there was a provision allowing a judge to override this requirement if, for example, it would subject the girl involved to abuse. In its first cases under the law, the Texas Supreme Court-with Gonzales in the majority-interpreted this judicial-bypass provision broadly. So broadly, according to one furious dissenting justice, that the law itself was gutted.

The dissenters made a strong case that the court's reading of the law was far-fetched. In Gonzales's defense, however, it should be noted that their predictions have not been borne out: Judicial bypasses have been rare. More important, the notification cases were so limited in their focus (and so messy) that they don't shed much light on Gonzales's views of abortion generally or of its constitutional status.

If he nominates Gonzales, Bush will be following his father's strategy on Supreme Court nominees. Like Clarence Thomas, Gonzales is a member of a minority group who climbed up from poverty. It is a melancholy fact that no principled conservative justice has been confirmed in 30 years without the benefit of affirmative action. (People often forget that Antonin Scalia was the first Italian-American nominee. Mario Cuomo endorsed him, and the Senate voted 98-0 to confirm him.)

Bush would also be following what might be called the Cheney precedent. Bush evidently concluded that a man he could trust to vet his potential running mates was trustworthy enough to be his running mate. Will he reach the same conclusion about the man he's put in charge of vetting his potential Supreme Court nominees? And then, of course, there is the precedent of Gonzales himself: He's been Bush's counsel, and then his judicial nominee, before.

Gonzales is by no means a sure thing as a nominee. Bush might decide to go with someone with more judicial experience. And Gonzales has told reporters that he's not interested in joining the Court. But a lot of people still think he's going to be Bush's first Court nominee. The administration may have a legal dream team working for it, but conservatives have reason to be nervous.


http://www.findarticles.com/p/artic..._53/ai_73090170


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Last edited by PeacefulWarrior on Nov-11-2004 at 05:46

Old Post Nov-11-2004 05:35  United States
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icyhandofcrap
Supreme tranceaddict



Registered: Jan 2004
Location: Cali

quote:
Specifically, Gonzales' memo said the Geneva Convention that had long governed the treatment of prisoners did not apply to al-Qaida or the war in Afghanistan (news - web sites). The memo called some of the Geneva Convention's provisions "quaint.


quote:
After complaints about civil rights abuses in the name of fighting terror, Gonzales said, "There should be no question regarding the department's commitment to justice for every American. On this principle there can be no compromise."


quote:
Gonzales also defended the administration's policy — essentially repudiated by the Supreme Court and now being fought out in lower courts — of detaining certain terrorism suspects for extended periods without access to lawyers or courts.


quote:
"Alberto Gonzales' role in the development of policies that ultimately led to the Abu Ghraib prison scandals in Iraq (news - web sites) is deeply troubling," said Ralph Neas, president of the liberal People For the American Way. He said senators should question Gonzales closely on these matters.


Sounds like Ashcroft.


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Old Post Nov-11-2004 05:39  United States
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