News Action Alert

Ashcroft Out, Gonzales In?

By November 23, 2004October 25th, 2018No Comments

As White House counsel, Alberto Gonzales defended the detention of terrorist suspects without access to lawyers, and the abusive interrogation tactics used at Abu Ghraib.

from Immigration News Briefs (INB)

Attorney General John Ashcroft announced on Nov. 9 that he would

resign. Ashcroft was favored by Christian fundamentalist sectors

of the Republican political base and was widely criticized by

rights advocates for his antagonism toward immigrants and civil

liberties. Ashcroft presided over a federal dragnet that

apprehended and deported hundreds of Arabs and South Asians on

immigration violations under the pretext of the “war on terror.”

[New York Times 11/10/04; Washington Post 11/10/04]

On Nov. 10, President George W. Bush nominated White House

counsel Alberto Gonzales to succeed Ashcroft as attorney general.

Gonzales has publicly defended the Bush administration’s policy

of detaining terrorism suspects for extended periods without

access to lawyers or courts. He is best known for his January 25,

2002 memo stating that the “war against terrorism” creates a “new

paradigm” which “renders obsolete Geneva’s strict limitations on

questioning of enemy prisoners and renders quaint some of its

provisions.” Gonzales must be confirmed by the Senate before he

can take office. [AP 11/10/04; ACLU Press Release 11/10/04;

American Progress 11/10/04]