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Attorney General Alberto Gonzales leaves after meeting with Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., Wednesday on Capitol Hill. Later, Pryor said he again told the attorney general that he should resign.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales leaves after meeting with Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., Wednesday on Capitol Hill. Later, Pryor said he again told the attorney general that he should resign.
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Washington – Putting their congressional control to work, Democrats approved new subpoenas Wednesday – and a grant of immunity – for probes ranging from the prosecutor firings and White House political activities to President Bush’s justification for the war in Iraq.

Democrats said the broad array of investigations represents a revival of Congress’ role after six years of little oversight of the Bush administration by Republican lawmakers.

Administration defiant

The White House is pushing back, refusing to allow officials to testify under oath about the firings and arguing that top officials – including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, subject of one of the subpoenas – already have answered questions about the administration’s now-discredited claim Iraq was seeking uranium for a bomb.

“I am beginning to wonder whether the White House has any interest in the American people learning the truth about these matters,” said Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.

Congress’ effort isn’t driven solely by Democrats. Republicans have barely restrained their disdain for Attorney General Alberto Gonzales’ accounting of the firings, including his claims of a faulty memory.

Sen. Arlen Specter, ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee, co-signed a letter with Leahy on Wednesday urging Gonzales to freshen his memory and provide answers within a week.

“We are reviewing this request,” said Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd.

Congress was ramping up investigations of the White House on several fronts:

The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee voted 21-10 to issue a subpoena to Rice to compel her testimony on the Bush administration’s pre-war claims about Saddam Hussein seeking weapons of mass destruction.

Next door, the House Judiciary Committee voted 32-6 to grant immunity from prosecution to Monica Goodling, Gonzales’ White House liaison, for testimony on why the administration fired eight federal prosecutors. The panel also unanimously approved – but did not issue – a subpoena to compel her to testify. In addition, the committee scheduled a May 10 hearing for Gonzales.

Across Capitol Hill, Leahy’s panel approved – but did not issue – a subpoena in the firings matter for Sara Taylor, deputy to Bush political adviser Karl Rove.

The House oversight committee also issued subpoenas for the Republican National Committee for testimony and documents about White House e-mails on RNC accounts that are said to be missing.

The RNC released a letter to the panel listing 37 White House officials who have RNC e-mail accounts, including Rove.

Mending of fences fails

Gonzales, meanwhile, was trying to mend fences. He met privately with Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., who has contended Gonzales wasn’t truthful with him about the dismissal of the U.S. attorney in Little Rock. The outreach didn’t take.

“I reiterated with the attorney general, face-to-face, that I think he should resign,” Pryor told reporters.

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