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thedrifter
11-15-04, 10:06 AM
Nov 15, 11:01 AM EST

Powell and three others to leave cabinet

By GEORGE GEDDA and DEB RIECHMANN
Associated Press Writers

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Secretary of State Colin Powell and three other Cabinet members submitted their resignations, a senior administration official said Monday, as the shake-up of President Bush's second-term team escalated.

Besides Powell, who had argued Bush's case for ousting Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein before a skeptical U.N. Security Council in February 2003, others whose resignations were confirmed Monday included Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman, Education Secretary Rod Paige and Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham.

The departures of Attorney General John Ashcroft and Commerce Secretary Donald Evans had been announced last week. The resignations announced Monday bring to six - out of 15 - the number of Cabinet members to decide so far to leave.

Bush already has chosen White House counsel Alberto Gonzales to succeed Ashcroft.






Powell, who long has been rumored planning only a single term with Bush, told his aides that he intends to leave once Bush settles on a successor, said the officials, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The White House was preparing an announcement to confirm Powell's resignation. According to one official, Powell expects that his departure date will be sometime in January. It was not immediately clear whether he would leave before Bush's second inauguration, on Jan 20.

Most of the speculation on a successor has centered on U.N. Ambassador John Danforth, a Republican and former U.S. senator from Missouri, and national security adviser Condoleezza Rice.

Powell expects that his departure date will be sometime in January, the officials said. It was not immediately clear whether he would leave before Bush's second inauguration, on Jan 20.

Most of the speculation on his successor has centered on U.N. Ambassador John Danforth, a Republican and former U.S. senator from Missouri, and national security adviser Condoleezza Rice.

Abraham, a former senator from Michigan, joined the administration after he lost a bid for re-election, becoming the nation's 10th energy secretary. If he stays at the post until the end of this term, as is planned, he would become the longest-serving secretary at the department.

Sources said that Abraham intends to stay in Washington, where he plans to work in private law practice.

Abraham struggled in attempt to get Congress to endorse the Bush administration's broad energy agenda, but he was unable to convince Congress to enact energy legislation. Abraham, on another front, worked aggressively to expand the government's efforts safeguarding nuclear materials and convinced the White House to put more money into nuclear non-proliferation efforts. He also pushed aggressively to expand resesarch into hydrogen-fuel vehicles.

The leading candidate to replace Paige, meanwhile, is Margaret Spellings, Bush's domestic policy adviser who helped shape his school agenda when he was the Texas governor.

Paige, 71, the nation's seventh education secretary, is the first black person to serve in the job. He grew up in segregated Mississippi and built a career on a belief that education equalizes opportunity, moving from college dean and school superintendent to education chief.

Powell has had a controversial tenure in the secretary of state's job, reportedly differing on some key issues at various junctures with Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld. Powell, however, has generally had good relations with his counterparts around the world, although his image has been strained by the difficult U.S.-led war in Iraq.

Powell, a former chairman of the military Joint Chiefs of Staff under the first President Bush, led the current administration argument at the United Nations for a military attack to oust Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, arguing a weapons-of-mass-destruction threat that the administration could never buttress.

Powell submitted his letter of resignation to the President on Friday. He will go about his usual schedule and will continue at full speed until a successor is named and in place, a senior administration said.

Powell was scheduled to meet later Monday with Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom and was to attend a meeting of Asian officials in Chile Wednesday and a multinational conference on Iraq next week.

He told some two dozen staff members of his projected departure at the start of the day.

For many months, Powell had been viewed as a one-term secretary of state but he has always been vague about his intentions. He had said repeatedly in recent weeks that he serves at "the pleasure of the president."

One senior official said that Powell's departure was part of a much broader Cabinet shakeup, details of which should be disclosed soon.

There had been speculation that Powell might elect to stay on until after the Iraqi elections at the end of January, but the senior official made no reference to that possibility.

Powell had indicated, when asked, that he would be willing to remain in his post, but that a decision on that was up to Bush.

Powell's role in shaping foreign policy was one of promoting moderation and traditional diplomatic alliances with friendly nations. His influence was measured, though, since most of Bush's other senior advisers generally took a harder line and they often prevailed.

Earlier, after the 9-11 attacks, Powell helped fashion a fragile coalition of countries for the war against terrorism, careful to request all the help a country could give without pushing any country beyond its limits. Similarly, when leaders decided to end or shorten their troops' duty in postwar Iraq the State Department avoided any harsh reaction, saying simply that it was up to each country to make up its mind.

Iraq has dominated Powell's attention during his nearly four years as secretary of state. Powell will perhaps be best remembered for that U.N. Security Council appearance on Feb. 5, 2003, during which he argued that Saddam must be removed because of its possession of weapons of mass destruction.

There is no evidence that those claims had any foundation. Powell has maintained all along that the use of force of by the American coalition in Iraq was justified.

© 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Ellie

Doc Crow
11-15-04, 02:02 PM
Is this an issue or just a thing that was expected???? I know Powell was planning only 1 term but seems like a lot of people are jumping ship

thedrifter
11-15-04, 09:54 PM
Bush Chooses Rice to Replace Powell

By TOM RAUM, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - President Bush (news - web sites) has selected Condoleezza Rice (news - web sites), his national security adviser and trusted confidant, to replace Colin Powell (news - web sites) as secretary of state, officials said Monday, in a major shakeup of the president's national security team. Three other Cabinet secretaries also resigned.


Powell, a retired four-star general who often clashed on Iraq (news - web sites) and other foreign policy issues with more hawkish members of Bush's administration, said he was returning to private life once his successor was in place.


The Cabinet exodus promised a starkly different look to Bush's second-term team. Rice is considered more of a foreign policy hard-liner than the moderate Powell.


The White House announced Powell's exit along with the resignations of Education Secretary Rod Paige, Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman and Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham (news - web sites). Veneman had said last week she wanted to stay.


Bush's nomination of Rice is expected Tuesday afternoon, a senior administration official said.


Stephen Hadley, now the deputy national security adviser, is expected to replace Rice at the White House, the official said.


Combined with the resignations earlier this month of Commerce Secretary Don Evans and Attorney General John Ashcroft (news - web sites), six of Bush's 15 Cabinet members will not be part of the president's second term, which begins with his inauguration Jan. 20. An administration that experienced few changes over the last four years suddenly hit a high-water mark for overhaul.


Although there had been recent speculation that Powell would stay on, at least for part of Bush's second term, he told reporters on Monday "I made no offer" to do so.


Known for his moderate views and unblemished reputation, Powell went before the United Nations (news - web sites) in February 2003 to sell Bush's argument for invading Iraq to skeptics abroad and at home. But Powell's case was built on faulty intelligence that Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) possessed weapons of mass destruction.


Still, the former Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman remained the most popular member of the administration, moreso than even Bush.


In a resignation letter dated Nov. 12, Powell told Bush that, with the election over, it was time to "step down ... and return to private life." The 35-year Army veteran said he would stay on "for a number of weeks, or a month or two" until his replacement was confirmed by the Senate.


In an appearance at the daily State Department midday briefing, Powell said he had a full end-of-year agenda. Asked what he plans to do next, the 67-year-old Powell said, "I don't know."


In a statement, Bush called Powell "one of the great public servants of our time."


Rice, 50, worked at the National Security Council in former President Bush's White House and went on to be provost of Stanford University in California before working in the current president's 2000 campaign. Rice gave a flurry of speeches in political background states in the closing days of Bush's re-election campaign. That drew criticism from Sen. John Edwards (news - web sites), the Democratic vice presidential candidate, who accused Bush of "diverting his national security adviser from doing her job."


U.N. Ambassador John Danforth, the former Republican senator from Missouri, whose name was circulated in earlier speculation for the job, described Powell as "a great person" and "an outstanding public servant."


Powell, one of the architects of the 1991 Persian Gulf War (news - web sites) in the administration of the first President Bush, often sparred with hard-line administration officials such as Vice President Dick Cheney (news - web sites) and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld over Iraq policy.


"Secretary Powell's departure is a loss to the moderate internationalist voices in the Bush administration," said New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, a former U.N. ambassador in the Clinton administration.





Powell drew praise from overseas, where he was clearly the most popular member of the administration.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair (news - web sites) described Powell as "a remarkable man and ... a good friend to this country over a very long period." German Defense Minister Peter Struck called Powell's retirement "regrettable" and described him as "a reliable partner in conversation in the area of defense policy."

The resignations come as Bush faces major foreign policy challenges. The threat of terrorism looms, the fighting in Iraq continues with upcoming January elections in doubt, nuclear tensions remain with Iran and North Korea (news - web sites), and the Middle East landscape has shifted with the death of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat (news - web sites).

Paige, 71, the nation's seventh education secretary, is the first black to serve in the job. He oversaw Bush's signature education law, the No Child Left Behind Act. The leading candidate to replace Paige is Margaret Spellings, a domestic policy adviser who helped Bush shape his school agenda when he was the Texas governor.

Abraham, 52, a former senator from Michigan, joined the administration after he lost a bid for re-election. Abraham struggled to persuade Congress to endorse the president's broad energy agenda. Sources said he intends to stay in Washington, where he plans to work in private law practice.

Veneman, 55, the daughter of a California peach grower, was the nation's first woman agriculture secretary. Among those mentioned as a possible replacement are Chuck Conner, White House farm adviser; Allen Johnson, the chief U.S. agricultural negotiator; Bill Hawks, undersecretary for marketing and regulatory programs; and Charles Kruse, president of the Missouri Farm Bureau Federation.

Rep. Charles Stenholm (news, bio, voting record), D-Texas, who lost his bid for re-election, was also mentioned. He said he was flattered but has "not been contacted by anyone that counts."

The resignations are on a par with what other presidents who have won second terms have experienced.

In Ecuador for a meeting of defense ministers, Rumsfeld said, "I have not discussed that with the president" when asked if he planned to resign.

Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge, attending a meeting in Hawaii, declined to say whether he, too, would resign — but told reporters he has not submitted a letter of resignation. "And when those decisions are made, I'd prefer to share it with the president first," Ridge said.

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Ellie