The more things change…

Boy, these circumstances sure sound familiar.

[George W. Bush and Karl Rove] came together during young adulthood, when an ambitious former Texas congressman, George H.W. Bush, held the job of chairman of the Republican National Committee. It fell to the elder Bush to investigate allegations that Rove had used dirty tricks in a campaign for president of the College Republicans. The RNC chairman eventually cleared Rove, and was so impressed by the young operative that he hired him as an assistant.

Although Rove was an advisor ostensibly working behind the scenes, his name continued to be associated with public controversy. During George H.W. Bush’s second presidential campaign, Rove was fired from the campaign team because of suspicions that he had leaked information to columnist Robert Novak — the same columnist who first reported Plame’s CIA role in 2003, citing anonymous administration sources.

At the time, Bush’s campaign was in trouble, and there was concern that the president might not even win his home state of Texas. The Novak column described a Dallas meeting in which the campaign’s state manager, Robert Mosbacher, was stripped of his authority because the Texas effort was viewed as a bust.

Mosbacher complained, expressing his suspicion that Rove was the leaker. Rove denied the charge, but was fired nevertheless.

Bush gets in trouble, Rove leaks bogus information to Novak. Now, if only the end result — Rove getting fired — is the same, we’d really be making progress.

Interesting this quote is making the rounds. I found it on Sully.

“Even though I’m a tranquil guy now at this stage of my life, I have nothing but contempt and anger for those who betray the trust by exposing the name of our sources. They are, in my view, the most insidious, of traitors.”
— president George H.W. Bush, April 26, 1999.

  • And the quote, to paraphrase, when Rove laid eyes on W was that he was awestruck, that he had never seen anyone dripping with so much charisma.

    Does anyone remember Kevin Costner’s big star vehicle, No Way Out?
    Gene Hackman played a Defense secretary who murdered his mistress, and his awestruck and closeted aid, who quite possibly was in love with the old man, did everything he could to cover for the rat bastard, who ultimately decided that he would have to sink the aid lest he sink himself.

    I’m just noticing another kind of replay here, only the murder was of the mass sort, in Iraq. But I do believe if it comes to W’s own skin, that the rat bastard will toss him to the sharks.

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