AP
White House Mulled Firing All Prosecutors
By LARA JAKES JORDAN and DEB RIECHMANN
Associated Press Writers
Published March 13, 2007, 6:26 AM CDT
WASHINGTON -- The chief White House lawyer floated the idea of firing all 93 U.S.
attorneys at the start of President Bush's second term, but the Justice Department
objected and eventually recommended the eight dismissals that have generated a
political firestorm two years later.
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said Monday that then-White House Counsel
Harriet Miers raised with an aide to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales the prospect
of asking all chief federal district prosecutors to resign in 2004 as a logical
way to start a new term with a new slate of U.S. attorneys.
Perino also acknowledged Monday that complaints about the job performance of prosecutors
occasionally came to the White House and were passed on to the Justice Department,
perhaps including some informally from President Bush to Gonzales.
The U.S. attorneys, the chief federal law enforcement officials in their various
districts, typically are appointed to four-year terms by the president on the
recommendation of state political leaders, but serve the pleasure of the president
and can be dismissed at any time -- like the attorney general and other Cabinet
officers.
Democrats in Congress have charged that the eight dismissals announced last December
were politically motivated and some of those fired have said they felt pressured
by powerful Republicans in their home states to rush investigations of potential
voter fraud involving Democrats.
Perino said Kyle Sampson, the aide Miers contacted, objected that a wholesale
change of prosecutors would be disruptive. She also said deputy chief of staff
Karl Rove, the president's top political adviser, vaguely recalls telling Miers
that he also thought firing all 93 was ill-advised.
Sampson resigned Monday after acknowledging that he did not tell other Justice
officials who testified to Congress about the extent of his communications with
the White House, leading them to provide incomplete information in their testimony,
according to an official who spoke on condition of anonymity because Sampson has
not announced his departure.
Perrino said the Justice Department was working internally on a short list of
firings, and submitted that list to the White House in late 2006.
"At no time were names added or subtracted by the White House," Perino
said. "We continue to believe that the decision to remove and replace U.S.
attorneys who serve at the pleasure of the president was perfectly appropriate
and within administration's discretion. We stand by the Department of Justice's
assertion that they were removed for performance and managerial reasons."
Dating back to mid-2004, the White House's legislative affairs, political affairs
and chief of staff's office had received complaints from a variety of sources
about the lack of vigorous prosecution of election fraud cases in various locations,
including Philadelphia, Milwaukee and New Mexico, she said
Those complaints were passed on to the Justice Department or Mier's office.
"The president recalls hearing complaints about election fraud not being
vigorously prosecuted and believes he may have informally mentioned it to the
attorney general during a brief discussion on other Department of Justice matters,"
Perino said, adding that the conversation would have taken place in October 2006.
"At no time did any White House officials, including the president, direct
the Department of Justice to take specific action against any individual U.S.
attorney," Perino said.
The Washington Post reported initially on the idea of dismissing all the prosecutors,
saying it reviewed a number of internal White House e-mails preceding the final
dismissals.
The new revelations Monday evening came after congressional Democrats earlier
in the day singled out Rove for questioning about the firings of the eight prosecutors
and whether the dismissals were politically motivated.
Those demands to question Rove signaled anew Democrats' shifting focus beyond
the Justice Department and toward the White House in the inquiry.
Last week, House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich., said he would
seek to interview Miers and deputy counsel William Kelly for insight on their
roles, if any, in the firings.
Rove emerged as the Democrats' newest target after weekend news reports said the
New Mexico Republican Party's chairman urged Rove to fire David Iglesias, then
the state's U.S. attorney.
In a statement Monday, Conyers said stories about Rove's alleged link to Iglesias'
dismissal "raise even more alarm bells for us."
"As a result, we would want to ensure that Karl Rove was one of the White
House staff that we interview in connection with our investigation," said
Conyers.
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., who is leading his chamber's probe into the firings,
said he also wants to question Rove.
In an interview this weekend with The Associated Press, New Mexico GOP chairman
Allen Weh said Iglesias' "termination had already occurred" by the time
he spoke with Rove at a holiday party last December. But Weh made no secret of
his dissatisfaction with Iglesias, in part from the prosecutor's failure to indict
Democrats in a voter fraud investigation.
The White House has said previously that Rove wasn't involved in the firings,
but did alert Miers to complaints about Iglesias. It was not immediately clear
whether Rove also told Gonzales about the complaints.
Last week, Rove called the two-month controversy "a very big attempt by some
in the Congress to make a political stink about it."
Schumer called it "almost unheard of" for a federal prosecutor with
favorable reviews to be fired after a top presidential adviser like Rove received
complaints about his performance.
"The more we learn, the more it seems that people at high levels in the White
House have been involved in the U.S. attorney purge," Schumer said Monday.
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Associated Press Writer Deb Riechmann contributed to this report from Merida,
Mexico.