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Karl Rove to quit at end of August
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Karl Rove, President Bush's senior political adviser, will voluntarily step down from his White House post at the end of the month, senior administration officials said Monday.
Karl Rove was dubbed by President Bush as "the architect." "Obviously it's big loss to us, said Deputy White House press secretary Dana Perino. "He is a great colleague, good friend and a brilliant mind." Perino said Rove "wouldn't be going if he wasn't sure this is the right time to be giving more time to his family." The president and Rove are expected to speak before boarding Marine One at the White House at 11:35 a.m. ET. Bush will head to his Crawford, Texas, ranch where he will remain for the rest of the week. Rove, who has held a top position in the White House since Bush took office in January 2001, is to stand down on August 31. Video Watch why the announcement is so significant » "I just think it's time," Rove told the Wall Street Journal. "There's always something that can keep you here, and as much as I'd like to be here, I've got to do this for the sake of my family." Bush nicknamed Rove "the architect" for creating the plan that won the White House in 2000 and 2004. Rove told the newspaper that he would leave Washington to return to Texas and that he had first suggested the idea of leaving a year ago. Don't Miss * Rove's career highlights However a series of problems for the Bush administration, starting when the Democrats took control of Congress and then as immigration and the Iraq war topped the agenda, made the enormously powerful Rove stay on. But one of Bush's most trusted advisors claimed his hand was forced when White House Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten announced that any senior staff that were working past Labor Day (September 3) would be expected to stay on until the end of Bush's term in January 2007. A Bush loyalist to the end Rove, who instrumental in all aspects of the executive conservative agenda, told the Wall Street Journal that he expected the president's approval ratings to rise and that conditions in Iraq would improve due to the work of the U.S. military. advertisement Rove also took the opportunity to fire a parting shot at the Democrats, adding that he thought Hillary Clinton -- a "tough, tenacious, fatally flawed candidate" -- would win the 2008 presidential nomination. Loved by conservatives but a hate figure for many Democrats, Rove said he expected his rival party to be divided over the wireless wiretapping issue while the Republicans should come out top in economic issues closer to the 2008 poll. Link to story |
About damn time...
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woohoo Goebbels quit
come on Darth Dirk and Bushie follow the man |
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Yes, Goebbels is gone wahoo, and nice quote. I've always liked that one. |
Good for him.
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I wonder if any of these people will be assassinated out of office. They've done a lot of harm to people, made many people angry.
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- in the US for treason - in Den Hague for war crimes and then get raped for the rest of their miserable lives |
Spotting AOL founder James Kimsey, a big financial backer of President Bush who had just gotten back from Baghdad, Rove shouted out: ?Hey Kimsey, it must have been wonderful to see the happy faces on all those liberated Iraqis!?
Kimsey was appalled. ?Are you nuts?? he replied. He tried to tell the president?s political guru that the Iraqis he saw were sullen and resentful and that ?if we don?t do something soon, all hell is going to break loose.? But Rove wanted to hear nothing of it. ?Nice talking to you,? Rove responded and walked away. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20251378/site/newsweek/ :1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh This is the guy running Dubya's brain ( or whatever is there ..) |
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