http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20010716&s=corn



Rove-r and Out?

by David Corn

Maybe that Karl Rove ain't such a genius. In the past few weeks Democrats
have, with a touch of glee, been wondering about George W. Bush's
Svengali-strategist as Rove has stepped into several cow pies. Shortly after
the Jeffords jump--for which Rove took his lumps--the Associated Press
revealed that in March Rove met with senior Intel executives seeking federal
approval of a merger of two chip manufacturers--at a time when Rove held
between $100,000 and $250,000 worth of Intel stock as part of a portfolio
worth $2 million. Rove claimed he had not discussed this particular matter
and merely referred the Intel guys to others in the government. But if
someone knocks on the door of a Bush Administration official and can say,
"Karl sent me," does that not help the visitor? Several weeks later, the
Justice Department OK'd the merger--and Intel politely sent a thank-you note
to several Bushies, including Rove.

In addition to his ethics, Rove's judgment has been questioned, as his
ham-handed role in contentious policy decisions has made the Bush White House
appear as political as its predecessor--a tough task! On the campaign trail,
Bush the Outsider blasted the Slickster in Chief for governing by polls and
setting policy by focus groups. Yet Rove has pushed the Administration to
oppose stem-cell research, which involves human embryos, to advance his plan
to cement Catholic voters into the GOP bloc. And when Bush announced that the
Navy would halt bombing practice on Vieques in Puerto Rico in 2003, angry
Hill Republicans questioned Rove's crucial part in the decision and assailed
him for placing politics above national security.

Other bad news for Rove: A much-ballyhooed (and front-page) New York Times
/CBS poll in mid-June showed Bush's key numbers in decline. Have Bush's
(anti-)environment stands and coziness with Big Bidness taken a toll? In
other words, is Rove losing his knack?

The White House stood by him--for Rove is the White House--and quickly tried
to douse the Rove/Intel story. "My level of confidence with Karl Rove,"
declared Bush, "has never been higher." White House press-spinner Ari
Fleischer pooh-poohed the Rove matter, claiming, "The American people are
tired of these open-ended investigations and fishing expeditions." How did he
know? Did he take a poll? And how convenient for the GOP to gripe about
free-for-all investigations now. Dan Burton, the conspiracy-chasing
Republican chairman of the House Government Reform Committee, who
investigated every speck of controversy hurled at the Clintons, is still
pursuing the Clintonites, most recently by probing a nine-year-old
prosecution in Florida that tangentially involves Janet Reno. In any event,
when Fleischer made his statement, there was no Rove investigation under way.
Henry Waxman, the ranking Democrat on Burton's committee, had merely written
Rove, asking him to answer six questions regarding his stock holdings and
whether he had conducted meetings with representatives of other companies in
which he owned stock, including Enron, the Texas energy company. (At press
time, Waxman had yet to receive a reply.)

Perhaps Democratic senators--who, unlike Waxman, possess the power to
initiate an investigation--ought to consider poking into Rove's finances and,
more important, the influence of corporate contributors and lobbyists at the
White House. (Of course, the latter would invite similar questions about the
Democratic Party.) Yet they have not pounced. Senate majority leader Tom
Daschle said publicly, "Democrats want to legislate, not investigate." But
Waxman and Democratic Representative John Dingell have tried to push beyond
the Rove/Intel episode. They asked the General Accounting Office, the
Congressional watchdog, to examine the meetings of Vice President Cheney's
energy task force and determine who--and what interests--helped shape the
Bush energy plan.

Cheney's office balked. "We have not released a list of names so that people
could choose whether or not they wanted to air [their] views publicly,"
explained Mary Matalin, a Cheney aide. Funny, Republicans weren't this
respectful of privacy several years ago, when they demanded information about
the proceedings of Hillary Clinton's healthcare task force. But few Democrats
have raised a fuss about White House reluctance to release the information.
The GAO, though, told Cheney he must comply with its request. And still
Cheney has not turned over the material, setting up a potential clash.

The bloom may be off the Rove, but he's far from wilted. After all, Rove got
a fellow widely derided as a boob into the White House, and then he guided a
gigantic relieve-the-rich tax cut through Congress. Those are damn good
first--if not last--laughs. Now Bush can also thank Rove (and Cheney) for
helping to show that his White House is a down-home hoedown of corporate and
political favoritism.

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