Wolfowitz To Resign As World Bank Chief
Departure Announced By World Bank
WASHINGTON -- Embattled World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz will resign at the end of June, his leadership undermined by the generous compensation he arranged for his girlfriend. His departure was announced by the World Bank board.
At a White House news conference Thursday, President George W. Bush said he admires Wolfowitz, who the president said has the bank's best interests at heart.
Earlier, a spokesman for the Dutch overseas development minister said the charges against Wolfowitz are "bad for the bank."
The World Bank board resumed deliberations on Wolfowitz's future Thursday. The 24 board members are trying to resolve conflict-of-interest charges against Wolfowitz.
Pressure on Wolfowitz to resign has grown since Monday's release of a bank panel report on his handling of a generous 2005 pay package given to his girlfriend, bank employee Shaha Riza.
Her salary eventually increased by $60,000, and the bank panel concluded that the salary increase was "in excess of the range" allowed under bank rules.
Wolfowitz said he acted in good faith. But now he and the Bush administration are seeking a face-saving deal that would allow him to resign under his own terms.
Meanwhile, Wolfowitz has canceled a trip to a bank-sponsored conference in Slovenia on Thursday and Friday so that he can work with the board.
While Wolfowitz has been fighting to keep his job, the Bush administration has been expressing public support for him.
"What we've said all along is, first, we do support Paul Wolfowitz," White House press secretary Tony Snow said earlier in the week. "The fact is that he made mistake; they're not, in our view, firing offenses."
But that support seemed to shift its stance by saying that "all options are on the table" about who should lead the World Bank.
On Wednesday, Snow said the controversy surrounding Wolfowitz has been "a bruising episode for the bank." The White House, however, reaffirmed its support for Wolfowitz even as the bank's board met on the issue.
Departure Announced By World Bank
WASHINGTON -- Embattled World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz will resign at the end of June, his leadership undermined by the generous compensation he arranged for his girlfriend. His departure was announced by the World Bank board.
At a White House news conference Thursday, President George W. Bush said he admires Wolfowitz, who the president said has the bank's best interests at heart.
Earlier, a spokesman for the Dutch overseas development minister said the charges against Wolfowitz are "bad for the bank."
The World Bank board resumed deliberations on Wolfowitz's future Thursday. The 24 board members are trying to resolve conflict-of-interest charges against Wolfowitz.
Pressure on Wolfowitz to resign has grown since Monday's release of a bank panel report on his handling of a generous 2005 pay package given to his girlfriend, bank employee Shaha Riza.
Her salary eventually increased by $60,000, and the bank panel concluded that the salary increase was "in excess of the range" allowed under bank rules.
Wolfowitz said he acted in good faith. But now he and the Bush administration are seeking a face-saving deal that would allow him to resign under his own terms.
Meanwhile, Wolfowitz has canceled a trip to a bank-sponsored conference in Slovenia on Thursday and Friday so that he can work with the board.
While Wolfowitz has been fighting to keep his job, the Bush administration has been expressing public support for him.
"What we've said all along is, first, we do support Paul Wolfowitz," White House press secretary Tony Snow said earlier in the week. "The fact is that he made mistake; they're not, in our view, firing offenses."
But that support seemed to shift its stance by saying that "all options are on the table" about who should lead the World Bank.
On Wednesday, Snow said the controversy surrounding Wolfowitz has been "a bruising episode for the bank." The White House, however, reaffirmed its support for Wolfowitz even as the bank's board met on the issue.
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