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Showing posts with label Karl Rove. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karl Rove. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Iowa Straw Poll

Mitt Romney, Tim Pawlenty, Michele Bachman, Ron Paul, Newt Gingrich and Texas' Governor Rick Perry.  

The unintentional comedy meter has never hit higher ground, although the fact the GOP dealt a ticket like John McCain (who turns 75 on August 29th) and Sarah Palin (no comment necessary) was enough to trip the UCM scales to record heights in 2008.

As this political campaign enters the preseason for 2012, the one thing I would like the 2012 GOP candidates to recognize and acknowledge, is the fact that the eight-year presidential stint of their fellow Republican George W. Bush has a lot more to do with the current state of the union and state of the economy than the more recent three-year administration of President Barack Obama.

Let me take a quick quote from an informative op-ed piece entitled "What Happened to Obama?" which appeared in the NYT last weekend to illustrate my point:

When Barack Obama rose to the lectern on Inauguration Day, the nation was in tatters. Americans were scared and angry. The economy was spinning in reverse. Three-quarters of a million people lost their jobs that month. Many had lost their homes, and with them the only nest eggs they had. Even the usually impervious upper middle class had seen a decade of stagnant or declining investment, with the stock market dropping in value with no end in sight. Hope was as scarce as credit.

Three quarters of a million jobs that month.  That month!

So, please GOP candidates, especially Gov. Perry of Texas who was patting himself on the back and stump-speeching a misleading statistic that 40% of the net new jobs in the USA have been created in Texas.  Please don't insult my intelligence, Mr. Perry.  Please include the caveat that most of those jobs are low wage jobs to the point where Texas has the highest percentage of low-wage jobs in our nation coupled with the highest number of uninsured workers among all the 50 States and maybe Perry should add the fact that the low wage earners pay considerably high state taxes, compared to the richest wage-earners in the great state of Texas. And let us not forget, Perry employed the one and only Karl Rove to assist his first campaign before he stepped up to replace another Rove candidate in former President George W. Bush.

Lastly, dear GOP candidates, whenever you speak of President Obama and the troubles this country faces in foreign policy and the war, please use the name of Donald Rumsfeld in the same sentence. On Sunday, this editorial will appear to address the issues of foreign policy the US fostered during the Bush administration.  See: HERE.




Thursday, May 29, 2008

R-OVER ...



Oh my? Karl Rove, Mr. Subpoena himself, is calling his former Deputy Press Chief a "left wing blogger" and that is supposed to discredit Mr. McClennan?

Here is the Washington Post news story:

Ex-Press Aide Writes That Bush Misled U.S. on Iraq

By Michael D. Shear
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, May 28, 2008


Former White House press secretary Scott McClellan writes in a new memoir that the Iraq war was sold to the American people with a sophisticated "political propaganda campaign" led by President Bush and aimed at "manipulating sources of public opinion" and "downplaying the major reason for going to war."

McClellan includes the charges in a 341-page book, "What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington's Culture of Deception," that delivers a harsh look at the White House and the man he served for close to a decade. He describes Bush as demonstrating a "lack of inquisitiveness," says the White House operated in "permanent campaign" mode, and admits to having been deceived by some in the president's inner circle about the leak of a CIA operative's name.

The book, coming from a man who was a tight-lipped defender of administration aides and policy, is certain to give fuel to critics of the administration, and McClellan has harsh words for many of his past colleagues. He accuses former White House adviser Karl Rove of misleading him about his role in the CIA case. He describes Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice as being deft at deflecting blame, and he calls Vice President Cheney "the magic man" who steered policy behind the scenes while leaving no fingerprints.

McClellan stops short of saying that Bush purposely lied about his reasons for invading Iraq, writing that he and his subordinates were not "employing out-and-out deception" to make their case for war in 2002.

But in a chapter titled "Selling the War," he alleges that the administration repeatedly shaded the truth and that Bush "managed the crisis in a way that almost guaranteed that the use of force would become the only feasible option."

"Over that summer of 2002," he writes, "top Bush aides had outlined a strategy for carefully orchestrating the coming campaign to aggressively sell the war. . . . In the permanent campaign era, it was all about manipulating sources of public opinion to the president's advantage."

McClellan, once a staunch defender of the war from the podium, comes to a stark conclusion, writing, "What I do know is that war should only be waged when necessary, and the Iraq war was not necessary."

McClellan resigned from the White House on April 19, 2006, after nearly three years as Bush's press secretary. The departure was part of a shake-up engineered by new Chief of Staff Joshua B. Bolten that also resulted in Rove surrendering his policy-management duties.

A White House spokeswoman declined to comment on the book, some contents of which were first disclosed by Politico.com. The Washington Post acquired a copy of the book yesterday, in advance of its official release Monday.

Responding to a request for comment, McClellan wrote in an e-mail: "Like many Americans, I am concerned about the poisonous atmosphere in Washington. I wanted to take readers inside the White House and provide them an open and honest look at how things went off course and what can be learned from it. Hopefully in some small way it will contribute to changing Washington for the better and move us beyond the hyper-partisan environment that has permeated Washington over the past 15 years."

The criticism of Bush in the book is striking, given that it comes from a man who followed him to Washington from Texas.

Bush is depicted as an out-of-touch leader, operating in a political bubble, who has stubbornly refused to admit mistakes. McClellan defends the president's intellect -- "Bush is plenty smart enough to be president," he writes -- but casts him as unwilling or unable to be reflective about his job.

"A more self-confident executive would be willing to acknowledge failure, to trust people's ability to forgive those who seek redemption for mistakes and show a readiness to change," he writes.

In another section, McClellan describes Bush as able to convince himself of his own spin and relates a phone call he overheard Bush having during the 2000 campaign, in which he said he could not remember whether he had used cocaine. "I remember thinking to myself, 'How can that be?' " he writes.

The former aide describes Bush as a willing participant in treating his presidency as a permanent political campaign, run in large part by his top political adviser, Rove.

"The president had promised himself that he would accomplish what his father had failed to do by winning a second term in office," he writes. "And that meant operating continually in campaign mode: never explaining, never apologizing, never retreating. Unfortunately, that strategy also had less justifiable repercussions: never reflecting, never reconsidering, never compromising. Especially not where Iraq was concerned."

McClellan has some kind words for Bush, calling him "a man of personal charm, wit and enormous political skill." He writes that the president "did not consciously set out to engage in these destructive practices. But like others before him, he chose to play the Washington game the way he found it, rather than changing the culture as he vowed to do at the outset of his campaign for the presidency."

McClellan charges that the campaign-style focus affected Bush's entire presidency. The ill-fated Air Force One flyover of New Orleans, after Hurricane Katrina struck the city, was conceived of by Rove, who was "thinking about the political perceptions" but ended up making Bush look "out of touch," he writes.

He says the White House's reaction to Katrina was more than just a public relations disaster, calling it "a failure of imagination and initiative" and the result of an administration that "let events control us." He adds: "It was a costly blunder."

McClellan admits to letting himself be deceived about the unmasking of CIA operative Valerie Plame Wilson, which resulted in his relentless pounding by the White House press corps over the activities of Rove and of Cheney aide I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby in the matter.

"I could feel something fall out of me into the abyss as each reporter took a turn whacking me," he writes of the withering criticism he received as the story played out. "It was my reputation crumbling away, bit by bit." He also suggests that Rove and Libby may have worked behind closed doors to coordinate their stories about the Plame leak. Late last year, McClellan's publisher released an excerpt of the book that suggested Bush had knowledge of the leak, something that won McClellan no friends in the administration.

As McClellan departed the White House, he said: "Change can be helpful, and this is a good time and good position to help bring about change. I am ready to move on."

He choked up as he told Bush on the South Lawn, "I have given it my all, sir, and I have given you my all."

Bush responded at the time: "He handled his assignments with class, integrity. He really represents the best of his family, our state and our country. It's going to be hard to replace Scott."

Monday, August 13, 2007

Wise Words...

Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts recently said that ousted Bush administration and Republican strategist Karl Rove had “proved the politics of division may win some elections but cannot govern America.”

It made me think about the election to come in 2008 and the strategies that the candidates would create as they begin their pursuit of the presidency. Would they stay on the path to create further division between the parties? Would they cater to the base that seemed to put President Bush over the edge against his Democratic opponents of Gore and Kerry?
President Bush gave his longtime supporter Rove a White House send-off befitting the most honored of soldiers. The emotion-filled send-off might make you sick, if you were the mother or father of a soldier killed in action in the Middle East or Afganistan.

Yet, somehow, didn’t we all find ourselves feeling sorry for Rove, in some shape or form?

Was that the intention of the administration? Was it an attempt to appeal to the forgiving part of every human being’s soul? An attempt to manipulate every US voter’s soul?

Senator Edwards is pouring his heart and soul into the Iowa caucus. He is taking a calculated risk of putting his focus in Iowa at the expense of campaigning in New Hampshire.

As I recently toured in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, I notice the campaign headquarters for Mr. Obama but did not see much of a presence for Mr. Edwards. It made me wonder and I tracked down and emailed the field campaign manager for the seaboard region of New Hampshire, roughly an hour north of Boston, Massachusetts. The Edwards campaign responded to me in less than 12 hours and mapped out some dates (in the works) for an Edwards tour through New Hampshire at the end of August.

It is a full four months before the crunch time that will lead to the key portions of the campaign, the Iowa caucus in early January (12th) and the New Hampshire primary (22nd).

I can’t wait to watch it play out.