Obama's environmental adviser resigns

07 Sep, 2009

US President Barack Obama's special adviser for green jobs has resigned under pressure from leading Republican politicians and revelations about his controversial past statements, The Washington Post reported Sunday. Van Jones, a former civil rights activist from California, had been working for the White House Council on Environmental Quality since March.
"I am resigning my post at the Council on Environmental Quality, effective today," the newspaper quotes Jones as saying in a statement dated September 5 but released shortly after midnight on September 6.
Jones went on the say that on the eve of historic fights for health care and clean energy, "opponents of reform have mounted a vicious smear campaign" against him, according to the report. Jones became the focus of public attention last week when it was revealed that he had signed a petition that questioned whether officials in the administration of former president George W. Bush "may indeed have deliberately allowed 9/11 to happen, perhaps as a pretext for war," The Post said.
It was also revealed that Jones used a crude term to describe Republicans in a speech he gave before joining the administration, the newspaper said. As a result, several prominent Republicans demanded action against Jones. Republican Representative Mike Pence on Friday called on the adviser to resign or be fired, The Post said.

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