The Senate confirmed Eric Holder as U.S. attorney general on Monday, putting him in position to oversee President Barack Obama's plans to overhaul U.S. legal policy in the war on terrorism.
The Senate voted 75-21 to approve Holder, a deputy attorney general under former President Bill Clinton. Aides said he would be sworn in on Tuesday as the first black U.S. attorney general.
Holder, 58, is a former federal judge, U.S. prosecutor and prominent white-collar attorney.
Obama last week designated Holder to oversee plans to close the Guantanamo prison for terrorism suspects, and develop new policies on detaining and interrogating terrorism suspects.
The project is a centerpiece of Obama's push to restore America's image, which has been tarnished by charges of human rights abuses in the antiterrorism campaign launched by former President George W. Bush after the September 11 attacks.
"At a time when our moral authority in the world is threatened by the immoral acts that were sanctioned from the top, we need an attorney general who puts civil liberties first," said Senator Roland Burris, an Illinois Democrat who filled the Senate seat vacated by Obama.
The new attorney general must also protect the public against terrorism and "put people first" in combating Wall Street crimes, Burris said during a debate on the nomination. "We can be certain that Eric Holder will do these things."
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Holder Confirmed as Attorney General
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -
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