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Presidents
counselor announces resignation, hopes to return to Texas
By Ron Fournier
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
White House counselor Karen Hughes, one of President Bushs
closest confidants and perhaps the most senior female aide to any
modern American president, announced her resignation Tuesday. Bush
said he will continue to seek her advice from afar.
She
may be changing addresses, but shes not leaving my inner circle,
the president said in a telephone interview with The Associated
Press shortly after Hughes surprise announcement made her
the first top White House aide to depart Bushs staff.
Hughes,
45, an aide to Bush since his days as Texas governor, unveiled her
plans for a summertime departure at a daily White House briefing.
Later
this summer, Im going to be changing the way in which I serve
the president.
My husband and I have made a difficult but we think right decision
to move our family home back to Texas, she said.
Our
roots are there, she said. I guess were a little
homesick.
Bush,
in an exclusive interview, said Hughes broke the news to him Wednesday
or Thursday and he accepted the decision.
I
said, Karen, Ive always valued your advice and
she said, Youll have my
advice. So I said to myself as long as I have her advice,
judgment and friendship, I support the move, the president
said.
This
is Karen being Karen. She loves her family. She has always made
it clear to me ever since Ive known her that her husband and
son come first in her life, Bush said.
Hughes
and political aide Karl Rove were critical to Bushs rise from
a two term
Texas governor to the presidency. Rove, a fellow Texan with a teen-age
child of his own, has no plans to leave the White House, Bush said.
I
think theres a different set of circumstances, the president
said.
Hughes and Condoleezza Rice, the presidents national security
adviser, are two of the most influential female aides in White House
history.
Fifteen
months into the Bush presidency, this is the period in which senior
aides generally start considering departures from high-pressure
White House and Cabinet posts. White House chief of staff Andrew
Card has denied reports that he is considering leaving in the fall.
Bush advisers say they expect Hughes will not be the last senior
aide to leave this year.
Bush
said there was nothing other than Hughes personal desire to
return to Texas that prompted her resignation.
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