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			 Holder, an unapologetic liberal voice and one of President Barack 
			Obama's closest allies, will remain in office until a successor is 
			nominated and confirmed. His nearly six-year term, marked by civil 
			rights advances and frequent fights with Congress, made him one of 
			the nation's longest serving attorneys generals. 
 "I will never leave the work. I will continue to serve," Holder, 
			with Obama at his side, said during a brief White House announcement 
			of his departure.
 
 The next attorney general will face many challenges, including 
			managing counter-terror initiatives aimed at Islamic State 
			militants, balancing privacy rights against government surveillance 
			efforts, and deciding whether to continue attempts to prosecute 
			former spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, now living in Russia, 
			for revealing surveillance secrets.
 
 Holder's successor also will oversee a series of cases against banks 
			and individuals over the manipulation of foreign exchange rates, and 
			must decide whether to continue Holder's effort to scale back the 
			prosecution of nonviolent drug offenders.
 
 
			
			 
			Holder's departure could set off a tense confirmation fight with 
			Republicans in a lame-duck U.S. Senate session scheduled after the 
			Nov. 4 midterm elections, although the chamber's majority Democrats 
			can invoke rules making it easier to get around Republican efforts 
			to block confirmation.
 
 Republicans hope to gain a Senate majority in the elections, making 
			it likely Obama will send up a nomination before a new Congress 
			convenes in January.
 
 A White House official said Obama has not made a decision on a 
			Holder replacement. Names floated for the job include Manhattan U.S. 
			Attorney Preet Bharara, Solicitor General Don Verrilli, former 
			Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli, California Attorney General 
			Kamala Harris, Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch and 
			Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick.
 
 Holder forcefully embodied many of the president's most liberal 
			positions, including support for more gun control, criticism of 
			America's prison system and a desire to try terrorism suspects in 
			civilian instead of military courts.
 
 Despite a drumbeat of Republican criticism since becoming attorney 
			general in 2009, he was one of the last three original members of 
			Obama's cabinet, along with Education Secretary Arne Duncan and 
			Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack.
 
 Republicans responded to Holder's decision to step down with harsh 
			assessments of his tenure, and gave a preview of the difficulties 
			Obama will face in getting a successor confirmed.
 
 "I will be scrutinizing the President’s replacement nominee to 
			ensure the Justice Department finally returns to prioritizing law 
			enforcement over partisan concerns," Senate Republican leader Mitch 
			McConnell of Kentucky said.
 
 Holder made civil rights a cornerstone of his tenure, bringing a 
			series of cases against local police for using excessive force, 
			suing the state of Arizona over a law aimed at Hispanic immigrants 
			and successfully blocking many state voter ID laws before the 2012 
			election, likening them to Jim Crow-style poll taxes.
 
 He visited Ferguson, Missouri, last month, promising a Justice 
			Department investigation after the shooting death of a black 
			teenager by a white policeman led to violent clashes with police.
 
 While Holder has no immediate plans once he steps down, a Justice 
			Department official said, he has told friends that he wants to find 
			a way to help restore trust between law enforcement and minority 
			communities.
 
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			Holder built a name more on the people he did not prosecute than on 
			those he did, which is unusual for an attorney general. 
			The Justice Department did not criminally charge any major Wall 
			Street firm or executive for fraud in connection with the 2007-2009 
			financial crisis. Holder also steered clear of criminal charges 
			against CIA agents involved in waterboarding, an Arizona sheriff 
			investigated for civil rights violations and disgraced cyclist Lance 
			Armstrong, who admitted using performance enhancing drugs.
 Holder had previously signaled his plans to step down by the end of 
			the year, and the Justice Department said he finalized his decision 
			at a White House meeting earlier this month.
 
 Holder was a natural choice for attorney general after campaigning 
			for Obama in 2008, when he took on the sensitive job of helping to 
			vet Obama's choices for a vice presidential nominee.
 
 His resume included Ivy League degrees, a job prosecuting corruption 
			and a judgeship in Washington. Holder served in the Justice 
			Department's No. 2 job under Democratic President Bill Clinton.
 
 The Senate confirmed him on a 75-21 vote in 2009, reflecting some 
			Republican uneasiness about Holder's liberal views and about his 
			role in Clinton's pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich in January 
			2001.
 
 Holder quickly reassured Republicans when he dropped the Justice 
			Department's corruption case against Ted Stevens, a former 
			Republican senator from Alaska whom lawmakers had sympathy for. 
			Prosecutors in the case improperly withheld evidence from Stevens' 
			defense lawyers.
 
 The honeymoon began to fade during Holder's first month in office in 
			February 2009 when, in a speech on civil rights, he said America was 
			acting as a "nation of cowards." Critics denounced the comment as 
			not sufficiently patriotic.
 
 Later, he infuriated Republicans when he reopened a criminal 
			investigation into the CIA's use of waterboarding and other harsh 
			interrogation methods - the same probe that ended with no 
			prosecutions. Many Republicans thought the CIA's actions were 
			defensible and legal.
 
 
			
			 
			Holder's battles with Republicans reached a peak in 2012 when the 
			Republican-led House of Representatives voted largely along party 
			lines to find him in contempt for withholding documents from them.
 
 Obama claimed privilege over the documents about how the Justice 
			Department responded to revelations about a botched 
			anti-gun-trafficking program along the U.S.-Mexico border known as 
			Operation Fast and Furious.
 
 (Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton, Susan Heavey, David 
			Ingram, Aruna Viswanatha; Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by 
			Mohammad Zargham, Bill Trott and Steve Orlofsky)
 
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