Reaction to Karl Rove Resignation
Forbes - 41 minutes ago
By AP 08.13.07, 12:08 PM ET Karl Rove was an architect of a
political strategy that has left the country more divided, the
special interests more powerful, and the American people more
shut out from their government than any time in memory.
Karl Rove quits Economist
Exit Karl Rove, a Washington legend Turkish Press
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COMING ATTRACTING: Karl Rove Vs. Ron Paul
ROVE LEAVING WHITEHOURSE TO RUN GOP BID IN 2008
WATCH THE ATTACKS ON RON PAUL
My Ron Paul conspiracy theory. A hypothetical timeline: -
Wednesday, November 8th, 2006: Karl Rove wakes up on the couch
in his White House office, ...
http://knappster.blogspot.com/2007/07/my-ron-paul-conspiracy-theory.html
Monday, July 16, 2007
My Ron Paul conspiracy theory
A hypothetical timeline:
- Wednesday, November 8th, 2006: Karl Rove wakes up on the couch
in his White House office, where he's caught a couple of hours
of sleep after a long night. His first order of business is to
have a look at the latest vote totals from the previous day's
election. Those totals confirm the projections from before his
nap -- the Libertarian Party has "spoiled" elections in Missouri
and Montana, costing the Republicans their already razor-thin
majority in the US Senate.
- Thanksgiving Weekend, 2006: Rove sits down for a
post-Thanksgiving breakfast with several key party leaders to
discuss "the Libertarian problem." Over steak and eggs, it is
decided that enough is enough: The Libertarian Party must be
destroyed. Over the last four election cycles, LP candidates
have cost the Republicans at least four Senate elections -- one
in Washington, one in South Dakota, and the two key seats in the
2006 election. And with 2008 looking bad for Republicans anyway,
it's definitely a good time to take out the trash.
What's needed? A Republican candidate who's well-positioned put
the Libertarian Party down like a sick dog, with the assistance
of the LP itself, or at least of the LP's "base" of members,
supporters and prospective candidates (and, as it has transpired
in reality, with the financial support of the LP's founder, at
least two members of the Libertarian National Committee, and
even the LP's lawyer).
- December, 2006: Ron Paul's phone rings.
I've made no secret of the fact that I believe Ron Paul's
Republican presidential campaign to be a bad thing for the
libertarian political movement in general, and for the
Libertarian Party in particular.
What I haven't said before is that I believe that's the point --
that the objective of Paul's campaign is the destruction of the
Libertarian Party and the co-opting of the libertarian political
movement by a political party which will never serve that
movement's goals.
My evidence for this belief? I admit that I don't have much --
when you get right down to it, there's not a lot more evidence
for this than there is for the belief of many Paul supporters
that the US government was behind the 9/11 attacks, or that the
Federal Reserve is a communist conspiracy.
Then again, if those conspiracy theorists are honest -- if they
find the evidence for what they believe convincing -- then
they're going to have to believe this as well.
The "evidence," of course, is mostly of the cui bono? -- "who
benefits?" -- variety.
We know that the Libertarian Party is not benefiting from the
Paul campaign. Recent polling shows about 70% of LP members
supporting a Republican presidential campaign over any of their
own party's candidates. The idea that that could be good for the
LP -- or any other political party to which it happens -- is
ludicrous on its face.
We know that the larger libertarian movement isn't benefiting
from the Paul campaign, either -- because Paul has assiduously
avoided selling himself as a "libertarian," choosing instead to
brand himself a "conservative" during his presidential run.
And we know that the pattern of Paul's activities over the last
20 years has amounted to a gigantic fleecing of various
constituencies, including but not limited to the libertarian
movement and the Libertarian Party. At any given moment, Paul
may have sold himself to various donor pools as a "libertarian,"
a "constitutionalist" or a "small government conservative" (he's
a little cagier when selling himself to the racists, usually
stopping short of flatly identifying himself as one, and blaming
unnamed "ghost writers" for saying things differently than he
would have when he gets caught doing so) ... but he's arguably
functioned in office as a slightly cranky, but otherwise fairly
typical, Republican congresscritter.
Paul has drained untold millions out of the libertarian movement
and the Libertarian Party over the years by talking a good line
and casting strategic votes on the floor of the US House against
spending bills -- bills that he knows will pass without his
vote; bills he's already packed with pork that he can take
credit for with his corporate sponsors and his home-district
constituents, while denying responsibility for when he addresses
the various pools of "small government" donors he's been playing
like a fiddle for so long.
So ... why would Ron Paul bring his 20-year gravy train to its
final stop with the 2008 election? Why would he destroy one of
his key campaign funding mechanisms after such a benficial and
long-standing, if parasitical, relationship? Why would he cash
in his chips and take a flier on a GOP presidential run, when he
could just as easily keep fleecing the yokels already in hand?
Cui bono?
Well, he's 72 -- any way you cut it, he's nearing the end of his
own political career. It's time to start planning for posterity,
and the incentives in such planning often differ from those
germane to previous endeavors. This, his final campaign, sets
the stage for future speaking engagements, book deals, columnist
or commentator positions, and other lucrative projects. And
let's face it -- even a small segment of the Republican "base"
disposes of more such opportunities, with more money in play,
than the entire Libertarian Party apparatus does ... especially
if Paul can drag some of his existing libertarian fans out of
the movement and into the GOP behind him.
The Republican Party obviously stands to benefit if Paul's
campaign guts the Libertarian Party, either destroying it
outright or eviscerating its ability to field "spoiling"
candidates in congressional races for even a few election cycles
... which is exactly what's happening. And it's that benefit to
the GOP that makes it likely that he was recruited by Rove or
some other GOP operative, with a quid pro quo on the table to
seal the deal.
If I had to guess, I'd guess that part of that quid pro quo is
in the way of keeping Paul's US House seat in the family. I
predict that when Ron Paul, Jr. steps forward to claim his
father's seat, the Republican power structure will stand aside
for him instead of putting up a "party machine approved" primary
opponent. It's also possible that various Paul family members or
associates will be tapped for executive branch posts -- probably
not on the Cabinet level unless it's Paul himself, but hey,
"Deputy Assistant Undersecretary of Agriculture for the Wool and
Mohair Program Inspectorate" isn't half bad as either a paycheck
or a launching pad for a favorite nephew or a long-time friend
-- or provided with sinecures by grateful GOP corporate
contributors.
The sad thing is that even if Libertarians stop what they're
doing, think things over, recognize what Paul is doing to their
party, and stop supporting his assault on the very foundations
of the American freedom movement, it's unlikely that he can be
stopped per se. He'll probably drive his doomed campaign train
right through the Republican convention regardless of his
chances and regardless of the impact, and the LP will probably
have an even crappier election year than usual, regardless of
what LP members do. The damage is going to be severe, and it's
going to take years to recover from.
The best we can hope for is that LP members will return to
sanity sooner rather than later -- before, rather than after,
Paul's campaign collapses -- and start rebuilding their battered
party. Paul can damage us, but he can't destroy us. We can only
do that to ourselves.
Labels: Election 2008, Libertarian Party, Ron Paul