Treasury Secretary John Snow has signaled to the White House he is ready to 
resign once President Bush has picked a successor, administration officials and 
people close to Snow said Thursday. 
 
 
 |  Treasury Secretary 
 John Snow attends a rally at the Capitol in Washington May 10, 2006. Snow 
 is expected to resign by mid-June, according to CNBC. 
 [Reuters]
 | 
They said Snow has made clear he eventually intends to return to the private 
sector. They spoke on condition of anonymity because Snow is not ready to 
discuss his plans publicly. 
It's unclear when Snow will offer his resignation, these people said. 
However, Snow, still plans on attending a meeting of finance ministers from 
the world's richest countries June 9-10 in St. Petersburg, Russia. 
Treasury Department spokesman Tony Fratto declined to comment on Snow's 
future. "I don't speculate on personnel matters," he said. 
Snow, 66, took over Treasury in February 2003. 
He replaced Paul O'Neill, whose blunt talking style came to irk the White 
House as well as some Republican and Democratic lawmakers in Congress. Unlike 
O'Neill, Snow hasn't veered from the Bush economic line. Still, the White House 
is said to want a more effective salesman for the president's economic policies. 
People inside the administration said a replacement for Snow has not been 
chosen. 
Possible contenders who have been mentioned include Stephen Friedman, who had 
served as director for Bush's National Economic Council. 
The speculation about Friedman, who was formerly chief executive at Goldman 
Sachs, is being driven in part by the fact that Friedman has close ties to 
Joshua Bolten, another former Goldman Sachs executive who recently replaced 
Andrew Card as Bush's chief of staff. It was Bolten who helped recruit Friedman 
to serve as the head of Bush's National Economic Council during the president's 
first term. 
Bolten has been leading a shake-up in administration personnel since he was 
tapped as Bush's new chief of staff. 
Another possibility for the Treasury job is Don Evans, Bush's former commerce 
secretary and a close personal friend of the president. 
Yet another person being mentioned is David Mulford, who was appointed by 
Bush to be the U.S. ambassador to India. He served as undersecretary for 
international affairs at the Treasury Department during the administration of 
Bush's father. 
Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick has made little secret that he 
wanted the top Treasury job, but was not expected to get it. If passed over for 
the promotion, Zoellick would probably leave his current job for a job on Wall 
Street. 
There had been earlier speculation about a number of Wall Street executives 
possibly taking Snow's job. However, many of those individuals indicated that 
they were not interested in taking the Treasury slot.