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Attorney General-designate Eric Holder, foreground,
and President-elect Obama. | |
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Washington — President-elect Barack Obama has selected
Eric Holder for the job of U.S. attorney general.
“Eric Holder has the talent and commitment to succeed
as attorney general from his first day on the job, which
is even more important in a transition that demands vigilance,”
Obama said in a December 1 press conference in Chicago.
“He has distinguished himself as a prosecutor, a judge
and a senior official, and he is deeply familiar with the
law enforcement challenges we face — from terrorism
to counterintelligence; from white collar crime to public
corruption.”
If confirmed by the U.S. Senate, Holder will be the first
African-American attorney general. His father immigrated
to the United States from Barbados, and he grew up in New
York City.
As attorney general, Holder would head the U.S. Department
of Justice, which enforces federal law and ensures public
safety against crime and other threats. Along with prosecuting
cases on behalf of the U.S. government, the department also
oversees the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA).
Holder is widely expected to take the lead in closing the
Guantanamo Bay detention facility in Cuba, where more than
200 individuals are being detained in the war on terror
as illegal combatants.
Dealing with a large number of nonuniformed combatants
fighting independent of any national authority and engaged
in armed hostilities and terrorism in Afghanistan and other
countries has posed a thorny set of legal problems for the
United States.
In a November 14 interview with CBS, Obama restated his
intention to shut down Guantanamo. “I have said repeatedly
that I intend to close Guantanamo, and I will follow through
on that,” he said, adding that along with a firm stance
against torture, the closure is “part and parcel of
an effort to regain America's moral stature in the world.”
Holder served as deputy attorney general from 1997 to 2001
in the Clinton administration and is currently employed
by the Washington-based law firm Covington & Burling.
He has also served as a senior legal adviser for the Obama
campaign since late 2007 and co-chaired, along with Caroline
Kennedy and James Johnson, the president-elect’s vice
presidential selection committee.
Early in his career, Holder worked in the Justice Department’s
public integrity section. In 1988, he was selected by former
President Reagan to be an associate judge of the District
of Columbia Superior Court, and went on to become the U.S.
attorney for the District of Columbia in 1993.
For more information, see “The
Future Cabinet: Justice.”
The text
of Obama’s prepared remarks is available on America.gov.