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President Bush Nominates Alberto Gonzales as the Nation's First Hispanic Attorney General

WASHINGTON ( AP) November 10, 2004 –  President Bush nominated White House counsel Alberto Gonzales, who helped shape the administration's controversial legal strategy in the war on terror, to be attorney general Wednesday. He would be the first Hispanic ever to serve as the nation's top law enforcement officer.

"He is a calm and steady voice in times of crisis," Bush said, his eyes glistening with emotion as he stood next to Gonzales. "He has an unwavering principle of respect for the law."



 

 

 

 

 

NAME – Alberto R. Gonzales

AGE-BIRTH DATE – 49, Born Aug. 4, 1955, in San Antonio, Texas.

EDUCATION – Attended U.S. Air Force Academy; bachelor's degree from Rice University, 1979; law degree from Harvard University, 1982.

EXPERIENCE – White House counsel (2001-present); Texas Supreme Court justice (1999-2000); Texas secretary of state (1997-1999); Texas governor's general counsel (1995-1997); corporate attorney with Houston law firm Vinson & Elkins (1982-1995).

FAMILY – Wife, Rebecca, and three sons.

NICKNAME – Called "the judge" by White House colleagues. Known as Al to friends.

Legal brief:
NEW ATTORNEY GENERAL: President Bush named White House counsel Alberto Gonzales as attorney general on Wednesday. John Ashcroft is stepping down.

HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE: If confirmed by the Senate, the 49-year-old Texan would become the first Hispanic to hold the job.

WHERE HE STANDS: Gonzales has been at the center of developing Bush's positions on balancing civil liberties with waging the war on terrorism ... opening him to the same line of criticism that has dogged Ashcroft.

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."

A Harvard educated attorney whose parents were migrant workers, the soft-spoken Gonzales would succeed Attorney General John Ashcroft, one of the most powerful and polarizing members of Bush's Cabinet.

"'Just give me a chance to prove myself' – that is a common prayer for those in my community," said Gonzales. "Mr. President, thank you for that chance."

Some of Ashcroft's harshest critics welcomed his selection, while others voiced doubts.

"It's encouraging that the president has chosen someone less polarizing," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. "We will have to review his record very carefully, but I can tell you already he's a better candidate than John Ashcroft." Another Democrat, Sen. Byron Dorgan of North Dakota, said the Senate generally allows the president to choose his own team. "I don't think that's going to change much," he said.

The American Civil Liberties Union reserved judgment on Gonzales, but its executive director, Anthony Romero, said, "What we do know raises some significant doubts and trouble."

Senate Judiciary Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, expressed confidence Gonzales would be promptly confirmed.

Gonzales drew criticism after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks when he wrote a memo in which Bush claimed the right to waive anti-torture law and international treaties providing protections to prisoners of war. That position drew fire from human rights groups, who said it helped lead to the type of abuses uncovered in the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.

Specifically, Gonzales' memo said the Geneva Convention that had long governed the treatment of prisoners did not apply to al-Qaeda or the war in Afghanistan. The memo called some of the Geneva Convention's provisions "quaint."

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.

Bush was unapologetic about Gonzales' role.

"His sharp intellect and sound judgment have helped shape our policies in the war on terror, policies designed to protect the security of all Americans while protecting the rights of all Americans," the president said.

"My confidence in Al was high to begin with," Bush said. "It has only grown with time."

Gonzales' selection came just a day after the resignations of Ashcroft and Commerce Secretary Don Evans, a close friend of Bush. With more changes expected, White House officials said Bush intends to try to have successors in place when resignations are announced.

Bush sidestepped whether Secretary of State Colin Powell would remain for a second term. "I'm proud of my secretary of state," he told reporters after meeting with Powell earlier in the day. "He's done a heck of a good job."

Gonzales' political career has flourished under Bush's patronage over the past decade, since Bush was governor of Texas. Recruited from a Houston law firm in 1995, he served as Bush's general counsel, secretary of state and then was named to the Texas Supreme Court before accompanying the president to Washington. "I am grateful he keeps saying yes," Bush said.

But critics also raised their voices.

"Alberto Gonzales' role in the development of policies that ultimately led to the Abu Ghraib prison scandals in Iraq 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.

Bush advisers said two people would be naturals to succeed Gonzales as White House counsel. One is White House staff secretary Brett Kavanaugh, a lawyer who has been waiting nearly 16 months for confirmation on the influential U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. Another candidate would be Harriet Miers, a deputy chief of staff who was once Bush's personal lawyer, a Bush adviser said.

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