Add Sen. Ted Cruz to the growing list of pols calling for Attorney General Eric Holder’s resignation.
The Texas Republican said on Thursday that President Obama should “absolutely” call for Holder to step down because of his “willingness to disregard the law.”
Cruz, appearing on Fox News, pointed to last year’s “Fast and Furious” scandal and the Department of Justice’s decision to authorize subpoenas for Associated Press and Fox News journalists’ personal information.
“The conduct of the Justice Department does not inspire confidence,” the Tea Party favorite said, insisting it’s part of a bigger pattern of the Obama administration “not respecting the Bill of Rights, not respecting the First Amendment, not respecting the Second Amendment, not respecting our Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights regarding drone strikes.”
Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus and Jonathan Turley, a prominent liberal attorney, also have called on Holder to resign.
The criticism comes as a trial begins next week for Bradley Manning, the U.S. Army private who was arrested three years ago for allegedly providing classified information to the website Wikileaks. While the cases are different than the AP and Fox News (Manning was bound by an oath to not disclose classified information), issues surrounding the DOJ will surely be raised, as the Obama administration prosecutes one of the world’s most notorious secret spillers.
Related: Media parlay: Holder to meet with press amid leaks probe
Meanwhile, Holder began meeting with several media organizations this week as part of an agency review that President Obama has mandated since revelations of the probes surfaced. Obama has said he was unaware of the DOJ’s practices. However, many–including NBC News, CNN, Fox News, CBS News, Reuters, the Associated Press, The New York Times and The Huffington Post–are refusing to go unless the meetings are on the record.
Others, including ABC News, Bloomberg, USA Today, Politico, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal said they will attend.
Journalists who were at the meeting told Politico that Holder and Deputy Attorney James Cole expressed a willingness to revise the current DOJ guidelines for such probes but did not commit to any specific changes.









