Actually, Göring was not an attendee of the Wannsee conference. Nobody really in the top of the SS or the Nazi government lost any sleep over the holocaust though. The Nürenberg laws were co-written by Wilhelm Stuckart, a state secretary in the German Interior Ministry. Stuckart wrote the "Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor" which was passed with the help of Göring, though they might as well have put Pinnochio on the Reichstag's main chair that day because nobody was about to oppose it.
The main driving force behind the endlösung (final solution) was Reinhard Heydrich, supposedly with a mandate from Hitler himself. After he died it was Adolf Eichmann that took over that role and made sure the trains kept moving no matter what, and that well into the end of WWII.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wannsee_Conference
Göring was a huge proponent of the endlösung, and without his endorsment the trains that were desperatley needed elsewhere would not have been given with priority to Eichmann, but there is no real connection between him and the installation of the endlösung.
During the Nüremburg trials Göring was one of the few not so hypocritical to distance himself from the endlösung and not only admitted to knowing about it but being proud to have taken part in it.
PS: my keyboard has a öäü and ß because I use a German keyboard on this laptop so I cant help you out with that.