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Rove, Small Circle Lead Bush Campaign

 
 
Reply Sun 21 Mar, 2004 08:39 pm
Rove, Small Circle Lead Bush Campaign
Mar 21, 4:41 PM (ET)
By TOM RAUM

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush entrusts adviser Karl Rove to oversee his bare-knuckle bid for a second term. Yet Rove is but one of a small group of counselors helping to guide the most expensive, and possibly the most corporate-like, presidential campaign in history.

Aides emphasize Bush's hands-on role in the $170 million campaign. For instance, it was his decision to mount an early attack on his presumptive Democratic rival, John Kerry, and to air television commercials naming Kerry. The president also keeps close tabs on fund raising.

Bush and Rove talk daily about the campaign and stay in close touch with those running the Bush-Cheney effort from a nondescript office building across the Potomac River in Arlington, Va. There, Bush seeks political advice from campaign chairman Marc Racicot, a former Montana governor who served as Republican National Committee chairman, and campaign manager Ken Mehlman, Bush's former White House political director.

Mehlman is a Rove protege, and the two came to the White House with Bush from Texas. It was Rove who masterminded Bush's 1996 gubernatorial race in Texas and his 2000 presidential campaign, and Rove's stamp is clearly on the daily operations of both the White House and the campaign.

Among other members of Bush's brain trust are Vice President Dick Cheney; a brother, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush; longtime adviser Karen Hughes; and Ohio Rep. Rob Portman, a longtime Bush family friend.

Hughes left her job as White House counselor in 2002 to spend more time with her family in Austin, Texas, but remains one of Bush's most trusted advisers. She has become more active on the campaign trail in recent weeks, giving speeches and making campaign appearances.

Portman, the only alumnus of the first Bush administration serving in Congress, is actively involved in Bush's strategy in industrial battleground states like his own.

"We've never had such a comprehensive grass-roots operation," Portman said in an interview. "It's all about getting the vote out."

Bush's inner circle includes some of his biggest fund-raisers.

Topping the list is Mercer Reynolds, an Ohio financier who was a partner with Bush in the Texas Rangers baseball team. Reynolds gave up a prized job as ambassador to Switzerland last year to become national finance chairman of the Bush-Cheney campaign. He has been involved in every Republican presidential campaign since Ronald Reagan's in 1980.

Bush also is close to Bradford Freeman, a Los Angeles banker who is his California finance chairman and a longtime friend.

Still, it is Rove who will likely be toasted if Republicans win in November - and blamed if they don't. Little escapes his attention on either the president's domestic or international agenda.

Rove won plaudits after Bush led his party to victory in the midterm congressional elections in 2002. But his political skills came under question among some restive Republicans as Democratic candidates pounded Bush for three months while the president tried to remain above the fray.

Now, with Bush aggressively striking back at Kerry, Republicans are resting easier - and back on the same page of the Rove playbook.


(AP) Republican National Committee Deputy Chairman Jack Oliver is shown before a press briefing in this...
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Rove has boasted to conservative activists of the campaign's rapid response once it learned that Kerry was to give a speech in West Virginia, a battleground state. The Bush team rolled out a broadcast ad within 24 hours, dispatched volunteers to hand out pro-Bush material in the state, and made GOP officials available to local media outlets.

Other key players in Bush's re-election effort are:

_Mark Wallace, deputy campaign manager. A former legal adviser in the Department of Homeland Security, he worked on Bush's 2000 campaign and on Jeb Bush's three gubernatorial campaigns.

_Terry Nelson, political director. He's a former RNC official, former political director of the National Republican Congressional Committee and former campaign manager for Rep. Jim Nussle, R-Iowa.

_Matthew Dowd, chief political strategist. He was Bush's pollster in the 2000 campaign. He worked for two Democrats - Lloyd Bentsen and the late Texas Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock - before joining Bush's team.

_Jack Oliver, deputy national finance chairman. He's was deputy chairman of the RNC and was finance director of Bush's 2000 campaign.

_Mark McKinnon, Bush's ad maker. The one-time, singer-songwriter and former Democrat is based in Austin, Texas, and did the ads for Bush's 2000 campaign.

_Dan Bartlett, the White House communications director, and Nicolle Devenish, his counterpart at the campaign.

Other advisers deeply involved in certain aspects of the campaign include Mary Matalin, a former top aide to Cheney, and Cheney family members, Devenish said.
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On the Net:

An interactive look at President Bush's closest advisers is available at: http://wid.ap.org/campaign2004/innercircle.html
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suzy
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 Mar, 2004 07:46 am
Quite the gang of thieves!
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 Mar, 2004 12:28 pm
Gaffes and Senate Speak
Gaffes and Senate Speak

Kerry's political mistakes have allowed the Bush administration to cast the senator in a negative light?-and deflect attention from its deception about the cost of its Medicare plan
WEB-EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY
By Eleanor Clift - Newsweek

Updated: 4:58 p.m. ET March 19, 2004March 19

Real-time images of a deadly car bombing in Baghdad conflicted with Vice President Dick Cheney's celebratory speech at the Reagan Presidential Library marking the one-year anniversary of the Iraq war. As Cheney lauded the administration for freeing Iraq, scenes of blood and gore replayed endlessly on cable television as rescue workers picked their way through the rubble.

Cheney saved his best barbs not for Saddam Hussein but for John Kerry, portraying the Democratic presidential contender as a weak and unsteady leader who would put the country's security at risk. "He speaks as if only those who openly oppose America's objectives have a chance of earning his respect," Cheney said, an allusion to Kerry's comment that foreign leaders have told him they want to see President Bush George W. defeated.

Kerry's comment that foreign leaders want Bush to lose in November coincides with a recent Pew survey of global attitudes revealing anti-Americanism on the rise in the wake of the Iraq war. Substantively, the way Bush has trampled the Atlantic alliance has set back global cooperation that was a half century in the making. But politically the remark was a mistake. Americans don't care what foreign leaders think. They wear it as a badge of honor when the weak sisters in the alliance get their skirts ruffled by Bush's Lone Ranger style.

This is a critical stage in the campaign. The voters barely know Kerry, and the Bush campaign is racing to define him in a negative way before he can define himself. A 30-second ad calling Kerry "wrong on defense" began airing this week. An earlier ad claimed Kerry would raise taxes by $900 billion. The Associated Press reported that Karl Rove?-Bush's campaign Svengali?-boasted to a group of conservative activists meeting in Washington, "This is just a taste of what we're going to give him."

Kerry knew this was coming. "Bring it on," he said so often it became his battle cry. Well, now they've brought it on, and what is Kerry doing? He's going on vacation in Idaho, leaving behind the festering story of his unholy bond with foreign leaders. "Before long they'll be calling him Jacques Kerry," says a Republican strategist. "It's only a matter of time."

The cable networks also had a grand time airing over and over Kerry's response to the Bush attack that he didn't support the troops in Iraq because he voted against the $87 billion the administration requested to reconstruction. "I actually did vote for the $87 billion, before I voted against it," Kerry said. That's Senate-speak, and Kerry better shed it if he wants to win the election. Voters can't grasp the contortions of casting a preliminary vote conditioned on an amendment that would have paid for the war with Bush's tax cut, however high-minded that might have been.

If the election is fought on national security, Bush has the edge. Even if events on the ground in Iraq are not going well, Republicans enjoy a 20-point advantage over Democrats when it comes to keeping the country safe. Kerry thinks his strong suit is foreign policy. But the Bush campaign is ready to pounce on any misstep. "I just want to shake [Kerry,]" says a Democratic Senate aide. "[He's] got to be disciplined."

Meanwhile, the administration's deception about the cost of its Medicare prescription-drug plan gets drowned out by Kerry's mistakes. Tom Scully, the Bush appointee who headed the Medicare office, says he was just joking when he told the chief actuary that he'd be fired if he released to Congress the real cost of the prescription-drug plan. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson has ordered an investigation into the incident. This reveals a depth of duplicity and mendacity by this administration that could prove its undoing.

Nor has the lesson of Spain been lost on the Bush administration. What ultimately did in the Spanish government last week was its arrogance and deception. The public watched the aftermath of those terrible Madrid train bombings on television, and they could see for themselves that the scale was radically different from the Basque-separatist attacks they had been dealing with for decades. When the government insisted for three days before the election that the attack was the work of homegrown terrorists, Spanish voters concluded the government was lying. That has obvious implications for the White House. "If Bush is defeated, it will be because the American people decide he's not the straight shooter they thought he was," says a top aide to a Senate Republican.

Kerry can't reveal what a foreign leader tells him in confidence. What would that portend for him as president if he couldn't keep a private conversation private? But the Republicans show no sign of letting up, suggesting Kerry might be making it up or worse, conspiring with America's enemies to get Bush out of office. "I'm a little surprised they're stooping to that level rather than having their slimy henchmen do it," says a Democratic strategist, adding, "I'm also concerned it may work."

The harsh tone of the attacks this early in the campaign indicates that Bush is willing to drive up his own negatives in order to raise doubts about Kerry. The good news for Kerry is that he fights better when he's behind, and the way things are going, he'll soon be behind.

© 2004 Newsweek, Inc.
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