The House Judiciary Committee subpoenaed Karl Rove this week, in order to get his side of the story on, among other things, his possible role in the imprisonment of former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman. This morning, George Stephanopoulos asked Rove directly if he had been in communication with the Justice Department about the prosecution.
Rove didn’t seem like he wanted to talk about it.
Josh Marshall reminds us why this is so important:
There’s never been any doubt in my mind that Siegelman was the victim of selective prosecution. Even the government’s theory of the main case against him amounted to something that is standard in contemporary American politics and actually much less worse than lots of other stuff that no one thinks twice about. Cracking the nut of White House involvement has always been more difficult; but the evidence for it is quite strong.
If Siegelman’s and Alabama GOP lawyer Jill Simpson’s stories are true, that would make this case the centerpiece example of the corruption of the DOJ revealed by the US Attorney firing scandal. In fact, it would make most of what we know now seem minor by comparison.
It’s precisely why Rove was subpoenaed, and why Rove is going to fight like hell to avoid testifying.
Post Script: As an aside, ThinkProgress, most notably Amanda Terkel and Matt Corley, have been doing a lot of heavy lifting, highlighting the fact that Rove keeps appearing in the media as some kind of objective political analyst, when he is, in fact, an advisor to the McCain campaign.
Stephanopoulos, to his credit, introduced Rove as “President Bush’s former deputy chief of staff and political strategist, an informal adviser to John McCain’s campaign.” Rove balked at the description.
Rove can protest all he wants, but Stephanopoulos was right to call him an advisor to the McCain campaign. That Fox News has gone 110 days with Rove as an on-air contributor without disclosing his relationship to McCain continues to be an ethical lapse on the Republican network’s part.