By Neil Munro
The Operation Fast and Furious scandal demands a reform of federal agencies or the resignation of Attorney General Eric Holder, says Republican Rep. Darrell Issa, the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
“I’m asking the President to stop having full confidence in Eric Holder unless Eric Holder can start having full confidence in an array of [administration] people who are part a problem that has not yet really been fixed,” Issa said at a press breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor.
Holder should “stay there and fix it, or go,” he said.
However, “that’s not for me to decide. That’s for the president to decide,” he added.
Issa’s position bolsters his role as evenhanded chairman of the committee which is now investigating the controversial, tangled, multi-agency Fast and Furious gun-walking operation.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) program facilitated the purchase of more than 1,000 firearms from U.S. gun stores, and their delivery to Mexican drug gangs. Hundreds of Mexicans are believed to have been killed by the smuggled guns. One U.S. Border Patrol officer, Brian Terry, was killed on U.S. soil by a group of Mexican gangsters armed with two of the Fast and Furious firearms.
Fifty-two House legislators and two senators have called for Holder to resign, following more than a year of administration stonewalling and misleading congressional testimony.
The Operation Fast and Furious scandal demands a reform of federal agencies or the resignation of Attorney General Eric Holder, says Republican Rep. Darrell Issa, the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
“I’m asking the President to stop having full confidence in Eric Holder unless Eric Holder can start having full confidence in an array of [administration] people who are part a problem that has not yet really been fixed,” Issa said at a press breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor.
Holder should “stay there and fix it, or go,” he said.
However, “that’s not for me to decide. That’s for the president to decide,” he added.
Issa’s position bolsters his role as evenhanded chairman of the committee which is now investigating the controversial, tangled, multi-agency Fast and Furious gun-walking operation.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) program facilitated the purchase of more than 1,000 firearms from U.S. gun stores, and their delivery to Mexican drug gangs. Hundreds of Mexicans are believed to have been killed by the smuggled guns. One U.S. Border Patrol officer, Brian Terry, was killed on U.S. soil by a group of Mexican gangsters armed with two of the Fast and Furious firearms.
Fifty-two House legislators and two senators have called for Holder to resign, following more than a year of administration stonewalling and misleading congressional testimony.
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