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Posts Tagged ‘Karl Rove’

The Democrat’s favorite new Republican: Karl Rove

by Phantom Ace ( 128 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Elections 2012, George W. Bush, Progressives, Republican Party at August 22nd, 2011 - 8:30 am

Back during the Bush years Karl Rove was at the center of every conspiracy invented by the Left. Rove stole the 2000 election, he was behind 9/11, he invented the Iraq WMD threat and was behind Hurricane Katrina. He was the evil genius behind the Bush administration. Well times have changed!

Karl Rove, over the past few years, has taken shots at Tea Party Economic/Fiscal Conservatives. He’s been the voice of the GOP Establishment against the Conservative revival. Now he’s attacking Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Rove has been getting applause for these attack from the Left. They are calling Rove a voice of reason in the GOP. Talk about a change!

In the past few days, Karl Rove, President George W. Bush’s long-time consigliere and an erstwhile hate figure on the Left, has been welcomed back into polite society. Democrats who previously thought the only place Rove should be was in jail have been murmuring approvingly about his wisdom and moderation.

At the same time, Left-wingers whose only debate about Bush over the past decade has been whether he was stupid, evil or a lethal combination of both, are suddenly recalling the former president’s “compassionate conservatism”. The Huffington Post’s Howard Finemann noted that he was better read and more thoughful than previously given credit for and now seemed “like Pericles”.

The change of heart has been prompted by the appearance on the national scene of Governor Rick Perry. He was branded as “not presidential” by Rove, chiding him for his “very unfortunate comment” in suggesting that it would be “almost treasonous” for Ben Bernanke , chairman of the Federal Reserve, to print more money before the 2012 election. Perry had added that Bernanke might get treated “pretty ugly” if he visited Texas.

[…]

They first sought to marginalise Mr Perry, the longest-serving governor in Texas history and a man who has presided over the creation of a million jobs under his stewardship of the state, as a Bush clone.

Now Democrats now seem to have decided to portray him as crazier than that nice, centrist Mr Bush. The establishment media has eagerly followed suit. Speaking on PBS, the Washington Post’s Karen Tumulty declared that while Bush’s conservatism was “born very much of hope and affirmation” while Perry’s was “born very much of anger”.

Under the guise of ensuring Republicans don’t choose a candidate too extreme for the general election, Mr Rove has been an eager ally in this.

Read the rest: Getting ugly in Texas – Karl Rove and the Democrats desperate to stop the Rick Perry posse

Karl Rove is becoming the latest Republican to be a useful tool for the Democrats. They always knew Rove was no Conservative. He politically used Conservatives by giving them red meat on social issues without addressing economic or fiscal concerns. Now that Conservatives are worried about economic issues and are threatening the Liberal Republicans’ 23 year grip on the party he’s in attack mode. This change is why Rove is now beloved by Democrats.

Karl Rove is going down the David Frum route. A Republican they can use against the Conservatives, who can be held up as a sign of moderation. The Left can keep Karl Rove.

Update: See Speranza’s headline on the GOP attacks on Perry.

The real reason Republican pundits attack Rick Perry

 

Perry’s war with Team Bush

by Mojambo ( 26 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2010, Elections 2012, George W. Bush, Headlines, Politics at August 18th, 2011 - 12:56 pm

Karl Rove -the execrable so called “architect” (who blew the 2006 elections ) wants to defeat Rick Perry even if it means that Obama wins a second term. Rove is a miserable toady who comes on Fox News as if he is some sort of political genius. As the author states, a Perry victory would destroy the influence of the Bush family in the GOP establishment -not a bad thing in my opinion, emphasis my opinion! – as I despise the very thought of political  “king makers” (ex. Richard Daley the former Mayor of Chicago in the 1960’s).

Play nice!

by Matt Latimer

Just because Karl Rove is behind a plot doesn’t necessarily mean it won’t work.  That we’re still talking about the former Bush aide at all is a testament to his singular tenacity.

How has he done it? The man helped elect the Pelosi Congress—it was Rove who in 2006 was in charge of holding on to GOP majorities in the House and Senate. He helped elect Barack Obama—insisting that John McCain was the only “electable” Republican in 2008 and bad-mouthing most of the others running. His indispensable support of his boss’ overspending and government bailouts even helped create the Tea Party, which has bedeviled Rove and other GOP establishment figures ever since.

And yet billionaire donors to the Republican Party seem oblivious to the record, handing Rove big, fat checks to fund his activities further. Perhaps this is because he is charming and witty, has a statistic for every occasion, never stops calling people until he gets what he wants, says all the right things about battling “them liberals,” and wallpapers himself across The Wall Street Journal’s editorial pages and Fox News Channel, where his words are rarely challenged.

[…..]

His brazen and transparent attacks on a leader of his own party, Texas Gov.  Rick Perry, may be the greatest test yet of Rove’s remarkable resilience. Some, in fact, are starting to question if we have at last reached “the moment.” Years from now, will we look back at the 2012 primary season as the time when Rove put on his Fonzie jacket, flashed a thumbs-up sign, and then—finally—jumped the shark?

[……]

For years, Rove has made it a hobby of sorts to deflate conservatives more popular with the base than he is. Like any good bully, he has tended to focus on easy targets, such as Sarah Palin and Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell, piling on them as if he were hoping for a time slot next to Al Sharpton on MSNBC. So far he has (mostly) gotten away with this.

Now he and his henchmen are undertaking their most serious gamble. Rick Perry managed to shine in Texas without Rove’s permission, and now threatens to become the current Republican frontrunner without Rove’s blessing. This, Rove has decreed, must be stopped, even if his party is destroyed in the process.

[…….]

While in the White House, Bush 2 and his aides regularly scoffed at Perry for reasons that were never fully clear, making fun of his syntax and intellectual prowess without any sense of irony. In 2010 the Bush family, along with Rove and Karen Hughes, undertook an unprecedented effort to kick him out of the governor’s chair, handing a crowbar to Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, whom they judged more “electable.” Perry walloped her in the GOP primary, then went on to win a historic third term in the general election by a double-digit margin.  So much for electability.

But Rove is nothing if not persistent. Now he and his operatives seem to have something close to a war room against Perry, scrutinizing his every statement in an attempt to cut his young candidacy short. After Rove called Perry “unpresidential,” former Bush press secretary Tony “Ralph Malph” Fratto joined in—calling Perry, you guessed it, “unpresidential.” This was followed in quick succession by similar sentiments from a former Rove aide, Pete “Potsie” Wehner. Meanwhile, two “unnamed” Bush aides (wonder who they could be?) issued the following warning to The New York Times: “If you’re really trying to be the nominee and want to go the distance, you just don’t want the former president of the United States and his people working against you.” (Then again, that’s what the Bushes told Kay Bailey Hutchison.)

Whatever the rationale, this is truly a bizarre thing for the Bushies to do.  Openly attacking a legitimate Republican contender used to be considered bad form, especially in the noblesse oblige world of Greenwich and Kennebunkport from which the Bushes actually hail.

[…..]

The Bushes are usually more cautious than this, which means they must feel they have no other choice. A Perry victory would end whatever chokehold the Bushes still have on the GOP establishment. It would cut off many donors to Rove, Inc. Worse yet, Karl Rove and his compatriots simply cannot fathom the idea of having to sit on Fox News for four years defending the policies of the man who dared to cross them.

Perry’s response to all this has been clever and obvious: total silence. He has nothing to gain by stoking an intraparty war. And he need not worry about a bunch of operatives who took the last presidency they managed to a 13 percent approval rating. The former governor may also remember what happened to the Fonz after he jumped that shark. Though the show lingered on for a few more years, it was never quite the same.
Read the rest–  Perry’s War with the Bushies

 

Karl Rove tells Perry to lay off Bush

by Phantom Ace ( 8 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, George W. Bush, Headlines, Progressives, Republican Party at August 16th, 2011 - 3:20 pm

The Bush Mafia and Rick Perry have no love loss. Perry split from the Bush family back in 98, when he decided to go negative and win his election. Last year, the Bush family recruited Kay Bailey Hutchinson to run again Perry for governor. He defeated her and won re-election. Now Rick Perry is pointing out to people he’s no George W. Bush. He’s a fiscal and economic conservative. This has gotten Bush lackey, Karl Rove upset.

Karl Rove made it clear today that he’s none too happy about the way Rick Perry is treating his former boss, George W. Bush. Perry is aggressively distancing himself from Bush. Some tea party types Perry is seeking to woo think that Bush was a big spender. Perry’s making it clear he’s a different guy.

Rove was clearly steamed on Fox News this morning. He suggested Perry wouldn’t be where he is today if it weren’t for Bush: “Why he falls into this pattern of sounding like he’s being dismissive of the former president is not smart politics, either strategically or tactically.”

What Karl Rove needs to realize is that outside of band of hardcore loyalists, Bush is not a popular figure in politics. By making his differences with Bush known, Rick Perry is showing voters he’s not A Bush clone. Karl Rove needs to realize the era of Compassionate Conservatism is over. Economic and Fiscal Conservatism is what Republicans are looking for.

Rick Perry is the simplistic one?; if Perry wins – then Karl Rove is out!

by Mojambo ( 86 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012 at August 9th, 2011 - 11:30 am

All Republicans and conservatives have to deal with the condescending put downs by the liberal elites that their ideas  and plans are “simplistic”. Ronald Reagan in particular was said to be naive and simplistic whether dealing with the Soviet Union (he was denounced as being provocative for calling the USSR “The Evil Empire”) or with the ideas of tax cuts. Our betters at The Washington Post have decreed that Gov. Rick Perry’s ideas on higher education to be simplistic, therefore I think we must give him the benefit of the doubt.

by Mona Charen

Anticipating his entry into the presidential race, the Washington Post ran a long piece on Texas Governor Rick Perry’s ideas about higher education. “A man of grand plans,” the headline warned, “criticized as not sweating the details.” Are the headline writers at the Post on summer break? Did the temps have to dust off headlines from the Reagan era? Reagan’s ideas were constantly dismissed by the bien passant as “simplistic.” So anyone who gets tagged as simplistic by the Post gets an immediate benefit-of-the-doubt from me. As Margaret Thatcher said at Reagan’s funeral, ” . . . his ideas, though clear, were never simplistic. He saw the many sides of truth.”

So what has Perry done to earn this epithet? He’s taken on the higher education establishment in Texas. He has proposed – gasp — that Texas’s four-year institutions develop a plan to offer bachelor’s degrees for no more than $10,000. “Skeptics,” the Post tells us, say that the goal cannot be achieved without sacrificing “academic quality and prestige.” It shows, these same unnamed critics assert, that the governor has a “record of plunging into splashy ventures, at times, despite the complexities, constituencies, or sensitivities involved.”

[…]

During that same 1997-2007 decade that home prices increased by 68 percent and created a housing bubble, college tuition and fees rose even higher — by 83 percent. In fact, college tuition and fees have never increased by less than 73 percent in any ten-year period back to the 1980s. And in the decades ending in 2009 and 2010, college tuition increased by more than 90 percent. The still-inflating increases in the price of higher education are starting to make the housing bubble look pretty tame by comparison.”

In addition to suggesting that tuition be reduced, a panel appointed by Governor Perry suggested that professors were “wasting time and money churning out esoteric, unproductive research.” Shocking. The panel suggested dividing the research and teaching budgets to encourage excellence in both, while also introducing merit pay for exceptional classroom teachers.

Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal reports that students are flocking to colleges and universities in flat, freezing North Dakota to take advantage of lower tuition rates. Enrollment at public colleges has jumped 38 percent in the last decade, led by a 56 percent increase in out of state students. Colleges around the nation, the Journal advises, must now compete for a new kind of student: “the out-of-state bargain hunter.”

Admittedly, North Dakota benefited from oil revenue and spent generously on its colleges and universities over the past 12 years. But in a time of straightened circumstances for everyone, how does it not make sense to have colleges and universities compete on price?

Obama seeks to forestall this commonsense solution by once again increasing government subsidies. Student loans, courtesy of Obama, can now be “forgiven” after 20 years of payment, or after 10 years if students choose “public service.” Who pays the difference? You know who.

[…]

And Perry is the simplistic one?

Rick Perry’s education policy is more sophisticated then Obama’s

According to the Democratic leaning (to say the least) Polticio – there is another reason why I would support Rick Perry against all the Republican candidates and non candidates – Rick Perry loathes  Karl “the overrated” Rove, whose influence will be gone and he can spend his time trying to sound like he knows what he is talking about on Sean Hannity’s show on Fox, if Perry wins.  As the article states  “Perry winning would be a deathblow for Rove.”  By the way this is the second hit piece on Governor Perry in two days by Politico which tells me that Perry is the one that Obama does not want to have to run against.

For those of you who are interested in why the Bush’s and Karl Rove, Dick Cheney, James Baker, and Karen  Hughes wanted to defeat Rick Perry in 2010  it goes back to 1998. Rick Perry plays to win and does not believe in turning the other cheek.  I admire that!

In 1998, however, when Bush was running for reelection as governor and Perry was running for lieutenant governor, the two campaigns clashed over whether Perry should go negative against his opponent. Rove argued against it, insisting that Bush campaign polling showed Perry comfortably in the lead.

But Perry’s pollster Mike Baselice forecast a much closer result, and the feeling in Perry’s camp was that Rove’s real motivation was concern that negative ads would cut into Bush’s margin of victory, particularly among Hispanic voters, and undermine his efforts to build momentum for Bush’s planned 2000 presidential campaign.

After one particularly contentious phone call, one Perry campaign operative punched a hole in a wall in Arnold’s office. Perry’s campaign eventually went up with negative ads, and squeaked out a narrow victory. Rove offered a “most memorable” election night apology, Baselice told the Houston Chronicle in 2006.

In 2007, Perry was captured on video at an Iowa event for former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani’s campaign, declaring “George Bush was never a fiscal conservative — never was.”

Soon thereafter, Rove and other Bush allies began aligning themselves behind Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, a longtime Bush family ally, in challenging Perry in last year’s Texas gubernatorial primary. It was in the context of that bitter race that Perry’s adviser Dave Carney, in a 2009 interview with The New York Times Magazine, disparaged the Bush crew — and Rove specifically — as “country-club Republicans” and “not conservatives.

hat tip – Rodan

by Kenneth P. Vogel

If Texas Gov. Rick Perry ultimately decides to run for president, it would shake up the Republican race, directly threatening Michele Bachmann, Tim Pawlenty and the other candidates vying to be the leading alternative to front-runner Mitt Romney.

But it could also make things tricky for another powerful Texan — Karl Rove

Rove, who served as George W. Bush’s political strategist in Texas on his way to becoming the GOP’s best known political operative, had a falling out with Perry and his staff when Bush was governor in the 1990s that has become the stuff of Lone Star lore.

With no signs the two have patched things up — and with some suggestion that Rove, or at least his team, is tilting toward Romney — speculating how their relationship would play out if Perry becomes a candidate has become something of a fixation among Perry supporters and other Republicans in Texas and Washington.

Their interest is not just in the alliances and rifts stemming from a personal feud, but in the possible consequences for one of Texas’s major exports to national politics — money.

As the intellectual spark behind a network of outside groups including American Crossroads and Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies (or Crossroads GPS, for short), Rove is the unofficial leader of a shadow Republican Party that intends to raise tens of millions of dollars on ads to defeat President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats in 2012. But Rove’s network relies to a great extent on a small group of wealthy Texans, including some who have been major donors to Perry.

[…]

One person who has sent checks to both American Crossroads and Perry’s campaigns predicted that if Perry wins the nomination, his donors will cut off the spigot to Rove.

“Perry winning would be a deathblow for Rove,” said this person, who did not want to be identified talking about political contribution strategies.

Campaign filings show that if even a handful of big Texas donors feel the same way, it could have a major impact. Of the $35 million in reported contributions raised by American Crossroads (Crossroads GPS does not disclose donations), about half (more than $17 million) has come from Texas, according to an analysis of filings with the Federal Election Commission and the Internal Revenue Service.

And 11 of the biggest Texas donors to American Crossroads, a super PAC, have also given Perry $4.7 million since 2001, the earliest year for which Texas state campaign filings are electronically accessible.
Houston homebuilder Bob Perry (no relation to Rick Perry), for example, who ranks as the biggest known donor to American Crossroads at $7.5 million, has also given at least $3.3 million to Rick Perry over the years.

[…]

Read the rest: