appropriately…

Posted on Sunday 19 August 2007


During the last eight years, Karl Rove has been lionized and vilified, heralded as making the unlikely election victories of President Bush possible and impugned as reaching too high from an unusually powerful White House perch.

In the eyes of his many detractors, he has helped to send the Bush presidency off track in the process.

But in an interview at an IHOP restaurant here, days after he announced his resignation as Mr. Bush’s top political adviser, Mr. Rove defiantly dismissed the rash of fresh critiques that have come his way in the last several days, blaming the Democrats for the divisive tone that has dominated Mr. Bush’s tenure and for which he has frequently taken the blame.

He said he had no regrets over what some even some allies have called his greatest missteps, like his trying and failing to pass a sweeping overhaul of the Social Security system at the start of Mr. Bush’s second term, and the degree to which he seemed to meld partisan politics and official White House policy in his dual duties as a deputy chief of staff and Mr. Bush’s top political strategist.

He strenuously argued with the dominant characterization of him as the Oz — or, with Vice President Dick Cheney, the co-Oz — behind the curtain of Mr. Bush’s White House and presidency, declaring, “I’m the facilitator,” who has merely helped Mr. Bush as he has sought to shape his own views.

Mr. Rove at the same time described himself as an aggressive and studious inside player at the White House who is still one of the four or five officials forming Mr. Bush’s tight-knit, inner circle, but has had to work hard for the position. He dismissed what he called “the idea that I am somehow this all-powerful figure inside the White House.”

“What I’ve learned is that if I want my voice to be heard around the table,” Mr. Rove said, “it can’t simply be, ‘Well, he’s the long-term associate of Bush from Texas’ — I’ve got to dig in.”
And Democrats are currently investigating whether Mr. Rove inappropriately pushed for the dismissal last year of several United States attorneys for political purposes. (“Everything was handled appropriately,” Mr. Rove said.)

“The dividers, over the last six years,” he said, “have been the Democrats, who have routinely said he was not elected, he’s illegitimate, he’s a liar, he deliberately misled the country.”

Mr. Rove was asked whether harsh Republican attacks on the national security credentials of various Democrats in 2002, orchestrated by him, had added to the climate. Among the advertisements that year was one from the Georgia Senate race in which the Republican, Saxby Chambliss, called the Democratic incumbent, Max Cleland, a triple-amputee Vietnam veteran soft on defense and flashed the menacing image of Osama Bin Laden.

“President Bush and the White House don’t write the ads for Senate candidates,” Mr. Rove said, calling himself “a convenient scapegoat,” and blaming Democrats for their losses.

Democrats and even some Republicans have criticized Mr. Rove this week for what they have described as a single-minded pursuit of his goal of a “durable” Republican majority, with policies aimed at stealing away traditional Democratic constituencies like Latinos or weakening Democratic power bases like unions.

Voicing indignation at such critiques, he said, “With all due respect, don’t you think they would like to have a durable Democratic majority and put us as an un-durable minority?”
“The dividers, over the last six years, have been the Democrats, who have routinely said [Bush] was not elected, he’s illegitimate, he’s a liar, he deliberately misled the country.” In the world of Karl Rove, it was the Democrats who divided the country by saying these things – not he and Mr. Bush who divided the country by doing these things. In the world of Karl Rove, the firing of the U.S. Attorneys for political purposes was okay because it was "handled appropriately." I do agree with him, however, that he’s been "the facilitator," not the source of policy. His sole task has been to strategize how to get away with things – by doing things "appropriately" [meaning, by getting away with things without getting nailed]. In his speech last year to the New York Conservatives, he spoke of his own demise – allbeit by indicting the Democrats for his own sins.

These facts underscore how much progress has been made in four decades. It has been a remarkable rise. But it is also a cautionary tale of what happens to a dominant party – in this case, the Democrat Party — when its thinking becomes ossified; when its energy begins to drain; when an entitlement mentality takes over; and when political power becomes an end in itself rather than a means to achieve the common good. We need to learn from our successes – and from the failures of the other side and ourselves. As the governing movement in America, conservatives cannot grow tired or timid. We have been given the opportunity to govern; now we have to show we deserve the trust of our fellow citizens.

At one time the conservative movement was largely a reactionary political party – and there was a sense of pessimism even among many of its ardent champions. You’ll recall that Whittaker Chambers, who gave up his affiliation with Communism to join the West in its struggle for freedom, said he believed he was joining the losing side.

For decades, liberals were setting the agenda, the pace of change, and the visionary goals. Conservatives were simply reacting to them. But times change, often for the better – and this President and today’s conservative movement are shaping history, not trying to stop it. Together we are articulating a compelling vision of a better world – and I am grateful to all of you who are making that better world a reality.
This is the center of Karl Rove’s legacy. He talks about shaping history, or about how he helped Mr. Bush as he has sought to shape his own views. He talks about the conservative movement and their vision for a better world. What he doesn’t talk about is his methodology – that methodology that has come to be called "Rovian." George W. Bush and Dick Cheney have every right to have their world view. It’s not my world view. I would even argue that it’s not a correct world view. But that’s just my opinion. All of my personal howling isn’t about their view. It’s about how they’ve gone about putting that view into action. They have often lied, frequently distorted what truth they’ve been able to muster, acted in secrecy, manupulated the electorate and the Congress, destroyed our justice system, etc. It’s not their vision that we’re mad about, nor is it their attempts to "shape." It’s their methodology, and Karl Rove is dead center in the middle of that methodology. He delights in presenting himself as simply a facilitator – a skilled politician. What he is is an unprincipled white collar crook who plays dirty, and reflexly skirts the laws of the land. He has facilitated an incompetent President and a devious Vice President, helping them make an assault on the American system of government unparalleled in our history.

 
  1.  
    joyhollywood
    August 20, 2007 | 7:39 AM
     

    Welcome Home! Since Rove has announced his resignation about a week ago, I have been feeling strangely depressed. I suppose watching the most powerful person in the world and our country talk glowingly of his friend Rove has been dispiriting. What does that say about our country when a man who works for our president, gets a personal sendoff from the President at a news conference with glowing praises. A man who has proven to be one of the slimiest and mean spirited, sneaky liars of our times. We are at war where thousands have been killed and maimed and the man who helped the president achieve his goals by lying us into war is emotionally praised by our president for his talent and friendship. Why doesn’t somebody standing up to this evil man while he makes his rounds of news organizations doing what he does best lying and twisting the facts to blame the Democrats and anybody else but himself for the mess he has caused? I was a soccer coach for many years. We won 5 out of 7 first place titles during that time. If one of my players cheated in a game they were sent to the sidelines for the remainder of the game. It was just a game but I wanted the players to know that cheating was never acceptable. What does Bush’s actions tell our children when the President of the United States has people like Rove doing his dirty work? I hope Rove gets caught and goes to jail someday but I’m not counting on it.

  2.  
    August 20, 2007 | 10:06 AM
     

    Hello Joy,

    It is depressing to have Rove and Bush crowing around. History will make the correct judgment, but right now – they’re still at it. Sigh…

    Glad to be home, though it was one fine trip…

  3.  
    Smoooochie
    August 20, 2007 | 12:03 PM
     

    You said it, Mickey!! I am still curious as the motive of heading back to Texas now. It seems just as calculated as everything they do, and as we know that calculation is all about agenda.

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