Gonzales Exit Spurs GOP Relief, Dems' Hope
President Says Embattled Attorney General's Name Was "Dragged Through The Mud"
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Play CBS Video Video Bush On Gonzales' Resignation CBS News RAW: President Bush responded to Alberto Gonzales' announcement he was resigning his post as U.S. attorney general.
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Video Schieffer On Alberto Gonzales Bob Schieffer addresses Alberto Gonzales' resignation, the latest in a series of departures of President Bush's close friends from the administration, and who might succeed Gonzales.
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Video Timing Of Gonzalez Resignation Only On The Web: Bill Plante takes a look at why Attorney General Alberto Gonzales submitted his resignation prior to Congress reconvening after a summer hiatus.
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Interactive Tumultuous Tenure Attorney General Alberto Gonzales resigns amid firings firestorm, questions over handling of terror investigations.
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Photo Essay Alberto Gonzales Attorney General resigns after lengthy standoff over U.S. attorney firings, terror probes.
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Who's Who Firings Firestorm Justice Department at center of controversy over firing of eight U.S. attorneys.
Gonzalez called President Bush Friday evening, reports CBS White House correspondent Bill Plante, then traveled to Texas to sit down with the president and the First Lady at the ranch.
Insiders say the decision was Gonzales' own, adds Plante, though he was well aware that the president's top advisers thought his departure was in the president's best interest.
Mr. Bush, Gonzales' most dogged defender, told reporters he had accepted the resignation reluctantly. "His good name was dragged through the mud for political reasons," Bush said.
The president named Paul Clement, the solicitor general, as a temporary replacement. With less than 18 months remaining in office, there was no indication when Bush would name a successor, or how quickly or easily the Senate might confirm one.
Apart from the president, there were few Republican expressions of regret following the departure of the nation's first Hispanic attorney general, a man once hailed as the embodiment of the American Dream.
"Our country needs a credible, effective attorney general who can work with Congress on critical issues," said Sen. John Sununu of New Hampshire, who last March was the first GOP lawmaker to call on Gonzales to step down. "Alberto Gonzales' resignation will finally allow a new attorney general to take on this task."
Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, added, "Even after all the scrutiny, it doesn't appear that Attorney General Gonzales committed any crimes, but he did make management missteps and didn't handle the spotlight well when they were exposed."
Democrats were less charitable.
Under Gonzales and Bush, "the Department of Justice suffered a severe crisis of leadership that allowed our justice system to be corrupted by political influence," said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who has presided over the investigation into the firings of eight prosecutors whom Democrats say were axed for political reasons.
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the investigation would not end with Gonzales' leaving.
"Congress must get to the bottom of this mess and follow the facts where they lead, into the White House," said the Nevada Democrat.
CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen says the problem is that Gonzales never stopped being the president's lawyer.
"Clearly this attorney general was too close to the president," said Cohen. "He was too close to the president when he was White House counsel and a lot of people raised these concerns when he was nominated to be attorney general."
Gonzales also has struggled in recent months to explain his involvement in a 2004 meeting at the hospital bedside of then-Attorney General John Ashcroft, who had refused to certify the legality of Bush's no-warrant wiretapping program. Ashcroft was in intensive care at the time.
More broadly, the attorney general's personal credibility has been a casualty of the multiple controversies. So much so that Sen. Arlen Specter, senior GOP member of the Judiciary Committee, told him at a hearing on the prosecutors that his testimony was "significantly if not totally at variance with the facts."
Gonzales made a brief appearance before reporters at the Justice Department to announce his resignation. "Even my worst days as attorney general have been better than my father's best days," said the son of migrants.
Gonzales told the Senate Judiciary Committee as recently as July 24 that he had decided to stay in his post despite numerous calls for his resignation.
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