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WASHINGTON - Tony Snow, a conservative writer and commentator who cheerfully sparred with reporters in the White House briefing room during a stint as President Bush's press secretary, died Saturday of colon cancer. He was 53.
WASHINGTON - President Bush on Wednesday named conservative commentator Tony Snow as White House press secretary, putting a new face on a troubled administration.
Tony Snow, right, speaks after President Bush,left, announced Snow\'s appointment as his new press secretary, replacing Scott McClellan, in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington Wednesday.
A former news director at the Valley’s top-rated television station will become the new press secretary for Gov. Janet Napolitano.
WASHINGTON - White House press secretary Ari Fleischer, the public face of the Bush administration through two wars and a terrorist attack, said Monday he will resign in July to enter the private sector.
WASHINGTON -- The secretary for one of the world's wealthiest men and the wife of late Apple cofounder Steve Jobs are among those invited by the White House to attend the State of the Union address.
WASHINGTON -- The secretary for one of the world's wealthiest men and the wife of late Apple cofounder Steve Jobs are among those invited by the White House to attend the State of the Union address.
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has been the biggest player by far in the school reform movement, spending around $200 million a year on grants to elementary and secondary education. Now the foundation is taking unprecedented steps to influence education policy.
WASHINGTON -- The secretary for one of the world's wealthiest men and the wife of late Apple cofounder Steve Jobs are among those invited by the White House to attend the State of the Union address.
WASHINGTON - Treasury Secretary John Snow resigned Tuesday and President Bush nominated Goldman Sachs chief executive officer Henry M. Paulson Jr. as his replacement - another chapter in the shake-up to revive Bush's troubled presidency.
WASHINGTON - President Bush promoted his most trusted foreign policy adviser to Secretary of State on Tuesday, tapping Condoleezza Rice to replace warrior-turned-diplomat Colin Powell as part of a sweeping second-term Cabinet overhaul.
Dan K. Thomasson: There is a striking resemblance to covering the White House and nourishing an infant.
U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt, answers the question for reporters during a press conference in Bangkok on Monday.
State Rep. Chris Deschene has won the Democratic nomination to compete for the job of Arizona's chief elections officer and second in line to the governor.
Deschene, of LeChee on the Navajo Nation, beat former Arizona real estate commissioner Sam Wercinski of Phoenix.
In the Nov. 2 general election, Deschene will go up against Republican Ken Bennett, who has been secretary of state since January 2009. He assumed the job after Jan Brewer was elevated to governor.
Both Deschene and Wercinski said they wanted the secretary of state to have a more active role in Arizona's government that would better reflect the duties assumed when the governor is absent.
The governor's powers go to the secretary of state when the governor is absent from the state. Five secretaries of state have assumed the governorship in Arizona history. Arizona does not have a lieutenant governor, though a ballot measure this year could change that.
Deschene, 39, has experience in the legal and engineering fields. He was elected to the state Legislature in 2008 and has worked on bills that directly affect the voting rights of state residents.
Deschene said his diverse background made him best suited for the job.
Wercinski, 48, outspent Deschene by more than $30,000 in his first run at political office. Wercinski served two years as state real estate commissioner and touted his experience in the private sector.
Secretary of State Jan Brewer on Thursday sidestepped questions about how the direction of state government will change once she takes over from Gov. Janet Napolitano, perhaps as early as next month.
FLAGSTAFF — The race for secretary of state in Arizona drew fewer than a handful of candidates this year, and the only contest in the primary is between two Democrats seeking the party's nod.
The secretary of state is the chief elections officer, a regulator for consumers and the custodian for the state's official records. But most importantly, says Democratic candidate Chris Deschene, the secretary of state is first in line to succeed the governor if there is a vacancy.
That played into both Deschene's and Sam Wercinski's decision to seek the position. They'll face off in the Aug. 24 primary. Whoever wins will go up against Republican Secretary of State Ken Bennett, who was appointed to the position after Jan Brewer was elevated to governor, in the Nov. 2 general election.
Green Party candidate Michelle Lochmann has filed as a write-in candidate.
A provision in the state Constitution that dates from statehood nearly a century ago says a governor's powers go to the secretary of state when the governor is absent from the state. Five secretaries of state have assumed the governorship in Arizona history.
Arizona does not have a lieutenant governor, though a ballot measure this year could change that.
Both Deschene, of LeChee on the Navajo Nation, and Wercinski want the secretary of state to have more of an active role in state government that would better reflect the duties assumed when the governor is absent.
For Wercinski, of Phoenix, that means working with the attorney general on consumer protection issues, creating jobs and developing business.
"As the official keeper of all government records, it can help to provide more accountability and transparency in government," Wercinski, 48, said. "From there, be a key leader in helping fix state government."
At minimum, the secretary of state should be able to partner with the governor, the attorney general and other chief elected officials to address issues such as economics, infrastructure and education, said the 39-year-old Deschene.
Deschene said whoever is elected must have broad experience in voting on core issues affecting the state, a diverse background and be able to deal with economics. He asserts his qualifications far outweigh those of Wercinski, as an attorney, engineer and a state representative who has worked on bills that directly affect Arizona's voting rights.
"When they (voters) looked at the leadership component, they said, 'You've been proven and been tested with your military service, your experience running divisions and operations, departments that are responsible to a larger unit and running multi-million-dollar budgets,'" he said.
Deschene said he would institute a top-to-bottom review of the secretary of state's office if elected to make the voting process less complex and cut inefficiencies.
Wercinski said he's already started analyzing past elections and found clear patterns of people being disenfranchised because they are directed to the wrong polling locations.
Wercinski, a veteran who served as the state's real estate commissioner and touts his experience in the private sector, has outspent Deschene by more than $30,000 in his first run at a political office. Deschene had about $11,000 cash on hand as of May 31, while Wercinski had more than $125,000, according to the latest campaign finance reports.
"I'm the Democrat that shares the values that Arizonans seek in their elected leaders," Wercinski said. "I'm the Democrat that is inclusive, who is a good listener and who has empathy. That is a key value that I think is missing in leaders today, the ability to understand where other people and other communities are at this moment and what they're trying to achieve."
BAGHDAD, Iraq - New Defense Secretary Robert Gates arrived in Baghdad on Wednesday, armed with a mandate from President Bush to help forge a new Iraq war strategy. He made the unannounced trip to the battlefront just two days after taking over at the Pentagon.
WASHINGTON - Henry Paulson, a veteran of more than three decades of Wall Street booms and busts, knew the good times couldn’t last forever when he left his perch as head of Goldman Sachs two years ago to become President Bush’s third Treasury secretary.
April 12, 2005
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, center, arrives at Seoul Military Airport, Thursday.
Our View: Defense Secretary Robert Gates has reversed a 28-year policy that banned the media from taking any photos of the flag-draped coffins of our military casualties as they arrive back in the States.
SEOUL, South Korea - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Thursday she will not presume to tell South Korea or China exactly how they should enforce U.N. sanctions on North Korea, but called on all nations to cooperate.
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
Guest Commentary by Andy Warren, Maracay Homes
Guest Commentary by Michael Carroll
Guest commentary by Phil Kerpen
By Mark Heller, Tribune
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