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Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Robert D. Novak :: Townhall.com Columnist
Karl Rove's Legacy
by Robert D. Novak
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Who won Tuesday's presidential debate?


WASHINGTON -- The most useless speculation today in Washington is whom Chief of Staff Josh Bolten might choose to replace Karl Rove at the White House. He is genuinely irreplaceable. Nobody will attempt to combine the political and policy functions as Rove has done. Indeed, fellow Republicans question whether he should have attempted the feat himself.

Rove was a principal target of congressional Democrats even before February 2005, when he became deputy chief of staff in addition to senior adviser to President Bush. But the combination of the duties intensified the assault on him. Prominent Republicans of late have privately expressed the desire that he leave the government in hopes that might diminish the intensity of the Democratic assault.

While Rove decamping back to Texas is unlikely to defang the opposition, the mere fact that it is mentioned as a possibility reveals the ambiguity of his legacy. Rove is one of the canniest and most successful managers in American political history. Yet he is viewed within his own party's ranks, especially on Capitol Hill, as part of the problem afflicting the Grand Old Party.

Rove is unique, a rare political mechanic with a comprehensive knowledge of American political history. As an obscure young campaign consultant in Austin, Texas, 20 years ago, he embraced George W. Bush -- who had failed in both politics and business -- and gave him a plan to guide him into the White House.

But that victory in the 2000 election was so narrow -- a margin of less than 1,000 votes in Florida and one Supreme Court justice -- that it brought with it Democratic rage at Bush as an "illegitimate" president. In reaction, Rove went to work to build a stronger Republican base, reaching out to Bush administration officials for party building. That is nothing new in American politics, but has seemed more blatant the last six and one-half years.

The combination of party and policy was epitomized by the distribution in the White House of Republican National Committee e-mail accounts, with presidential aides given party BlackBerrys. This lethal melding was confirmed after the 2004 election victory, when Rove as deputy chief of staff took on policy as well as political duties.

He was at that point heralded in GOP ranks as a master politician, designing a ringing Republican victory in the 2002 midterm elections sandwiched by his guiding a flawed candidate to two presidential victories. But gratitude in politics is not forever. Republican congressional cheers turned to jeers after the 2006 losses. Continued...

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About The Author
Robert Novak is a syndicated columnist and editor of the Evans-Novak Political Report
 
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Subject: Is Mathews completely insane?
Did no one tell him that it was Richard Armitage, someone who's ideology is not so unlike his own, who "leaked" the identity of a person who does not fit the definition of a "covert agent" as defined by the only statute under which such a leaker might be prosecuted? This man is not just a lefty buffoon. He's a self-incriminating liar of the first degree! Does MSNBC have no standards whatsoever?

Even though, acutely aware of his obvious bias, I would never tune into his circus of a show, I am nonetheless subjected to his stupidity in quotes, through no fault of my own. Why am I being punished?! ;-) Couldn't we just ignore him? Maybe he'll go away.

wiseone
I agree...the name-calling and finger-pointing will not end just because Karl is no longer in town.
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