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Carville On Rove

by Pamela Leavey

James Carville dished out some thoughts on Karl Rove in the Financial Times on Tuesday covering Rove the “political operative” to Rove the “government figure“. Here’s a few quips:

There is also a distinction to be made between Karl Rove the political strategist and Karl Rove the government official. Mr Rove was not just an operative sitting at the Republican National Committee and scheming. He had a West Wing office. This distinguishes him from other political operatives, whose roles were outside the White House doing scheduling, advance work and presentation. They were not firing and hiring or shaping national security policy.

Mr Rove was as powerful a government figure as he was a campaign figure. The past six and a half years of Mr Rove’s career were spent as a very, very senior and extraordinarily influential Bush administration official.

He has been assistant to the president, senior advisor and deputy chief of staff. Mr Rove was the architect of social security reform, immigration, the hiring and firing of justice department officials and the placement of literally thousands of ideologically driven buffoons throughout the US government. As deputy chief of staff he was also responsible for handling the White House post-Katrina reconstruction efforts. On these actions, history has already rendered its judgment on Mr Rove. And, as we say in Louisiana, “it ain’t pretty”.

Rove’s resignation is dominating the news and the blogosphere with everyone pontificating on either what comes after Rove or “The collapse of Karl Rove,” depending on which side of the aisle is pontificating. Memeorandum has all the buzz

UPDATE: The L.A. Times reports now that the White House is downplaying Rove’s role:

Not to be “ungenerous or self-centered,” said White House Counselor Ed Gillespie, but he thinks some people overestimate Karl Rove’s importance. After all, Gillespie pointed out, during the 2004 presidential campaign he headed the Republican National Committee, the heart of the party’s operations. And he talked to Rove only “from time to time”

Another White House official, asked what it would mean to lose the legendary strategist, whose departure was announced Monday, recalled that Rove had started the staff’s “ice-cream Fridays.”

As one of the most powerful and controversial presidential advisors in modern history heads out the door, the White House is engaged in an unusual game of double spin: While President Bush bear-hugged Rove and showered him with praise in a South Lawn ceremony, officials like Gillespie quietly began to whittle down Rove’s image as the man who played a key role in almost every major decision of the Bush era.

L.A. Times staff writer, Peter Wallsten says, “it’s just politics,” or to quote the departed former GOP president Ronald Reagan, perhaps “it’s only a movie.”

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