SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Is Secession Doable? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: combjelly who wrote (755)11/7/2004 8:22:45 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1968
 
Bush strategist Karl Rove takes victory lap after election win

Posted: Sunday November 7,2004 - 03:01:51 pm

WASHINGTON (AFP) - Karl Rove, architect of President George W. Bush 's re-election, took a victory lap around the US talk shows, relishing the victory he had stage-managed from the shadows, and saying Bush will seek a ban on gay marriage in his second term.

Rove told "Fox News Sunday" that the president would continue to push for a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage.

"Without the protection of that amendment, we are at the mercy of activist federal judges or activist state judges who could, without the involvement of the people, determine ... that marriage no longer consists of a union between a man and a woman," Rove said.

"Marriage is a very important part of our culture and our society. If we want to have a hopeful and decent society, we ought to aim for the ideal. And the ideal is that marriage ought to be and should be a union of a man and a woman," he said.

Rove said the president does support civil unions, which give limited legal rights to gay couples.

Opposition to gay marriage -- along with a hard line on embryonic stem cell research and certain abortion procedures -- were key conservative planks of the Republican platform that was credited with drawing conservative Christians to vote for president.

The strategy devised by Rove recruited millions of new conservative voters to cast ballots for Bush.

Opposition Democrats vilify Rove as the master strategist "attack dog" of many political hatchet jobs, although his fingerprints are rarely found.

Rove is sometimes called "Bush's brain." Bush himself dubbed Rove the "architect" of Tuesday's win. And he engineered Bush's 2000 squeaker, after which Bush called him "Boy Genius."

"This country was a narrowly divided country in 2000," Rove said of the election in which Bush lost the popular vote, but won in the Electoral College .

"The country has slid to a 51-48 percent Republican majority. We gained seats in the US Senate, now have 55. We gained seats in the US House. This is the first president since Franklin Roosevelt to win re-election while adding to his party's numbers in the House and Senate.

"The country is still close, but it has moved in a Republican direction. This election confirmed that," Rove said.

Rove pointed to several key events in the campaign. One of those came as the Bush campaign pressured challenger John Kerry to explain why he had voted for a congressional resolution authorizing war in Iraq but then criticized the invasion.

Kerry was also lampooned by the Bush campaign over his comment early in the campaign on a Senate vote on funding for Iraq. "I actually did vote for the 87 billion (dollars) ... before I voted against it," Kerry had said.

The phrase helped Rove build his case that Kerry was a "flip-flopper" who changed position on key issues. The phrase was repeatedly replayed on Republican attack advertisements.

"It's the gift that kept on giving," Rove told Fox.

Rove, who has known Bush since the 1970s, when both first got involved in politics, said he is not taking Republican dominance for granted.

"There are no permanent majorities in American politics," he told NBC.

"It's important for people who come here to realize that we are here for only a time and we have an obligation of service and we need to keep things in perspective," Rove said.

"Those that the gods destroy they first make prideful."

sierratimes.com



To: combjelly who wrote (755)11/7/2004 8:26:53 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1968
 
"``Senator Specter's a man of his word, and we'll take him at his word,'' Rove said on Fox."

Is Specter screwed or what?


**************************************

Rove Says Bush Victory May Mark Republican Dominance

Nov. 7 (Bloomberg) -- President George W. Bush's election victory may begin decades of Republican dominance in U.S. politics, Karl Rove, the president's chief political adviser, said.

Rove, who Bush called the ``architect'' of his political campaign, likened the Nov. 2 election to that of 1896, when voters picked Republican William McKinley and ``realigned American politics years afterward.''

``I think the same thing will be here,'' he said on the ``Fox News Sunday'' program. ``It depends on how Republicans act in office.''

Bush received 51 percent of the vote, the first presidential candidate to win a majority since 1988, when his father, George H.W. Bush, was elected to follow Ronald Reagan. Republicans also expanded their majorities in the U.S. House and Senate. The president said Nov. 4 he will use his ``political capital'' from the victory to push for overhauling federal income tax laws and the Social Security system.

Democrat Barack Obama, who won election to the Senate from Illinois, said the U.S. is not as divided as the vote tallies suggest. Democrats can make gains if they ``present a proactive agenda and vision for the country and not simply run against something,'' he said on NBC's ``Meet the Press'' program.

Republican Success

Republicans won because they were more successful in talking about ``values and morality'' and conflating the issues of terrorism and Iraq, Obama, one of two Democrats to take a Senate seat from the Republicans, said.

In the next session of Congress, Republicans will have an edge in the Senate of 55 to 44 with one independent, and 231 of the 435 seats in the House. Rove said his party must make progress on its agenda to preserve the gains.

``There are no permanent majorities in American politics,'' Rove said on the NBC program. ``They last for about 20 or 30 or 40, or, in the case of the Roosevelt coalition, 50 or 60 years, and then they disappear. But would I like to see the Republican Party be the dominant party for whatever time history gives it the chance to be? You bet.''

Following the presidential victory by Republican McKinley with 51 percent of the vote in 1896, Republicans won six of the next eight presidential elections. They also held a congressional majority for all but six years of that span.

Democrats returned to dominate after the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932 in the wake of the Great Depression.

Surveys of voters after they cast ballots showed that 22 percent considered ``moral values'' the top issue at stake in the election, more than named the economy, Iraq or terrorism.

Amendment

Rove said Bush ``absolutely'' will pursue a constitutional amendment that would ban same-sex marriage. Bush supports letting states make laws that would give same-sex partners visitation rights in hospitals and inheritance rights, he said.

``Marriage is a very important part of our culture and our society,'' Rove said. ``If we want to have a hopeful and decent society, we ought to aim for the ideal. And the ideal is that marriage ought to be and should be a union of a man and a woman. And we cannot allow activist judges to overturn that.''

Another area where Bush will influence U.S. politics is in judicial appointments, including the Supreme Court. Chief Justice William Rehnquist, 80, is being treated for thyroid cancer and there are four justices in their 70s or 80s.

`Impartial Umpires'

The president believes judges should be ``impartial umpires,'' Rove said, and Bush will seek to appoint judges who ``strictly interpret the Constitution.'' He said there is no ``litmus test'' to only appoint judges who oppose abortion.

Any appointment is subject to confirmation by the U.S. Senate. Republican Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, who was re-elected on Nov. 2, said last week the Senate was unlikely to confirm judges that would overturn the 1973 Supreme Court ruling that permits women to have abortions. Bush opposes the ruling, and religious groups that back him have called for it to be overturned.

James Dobson, founder of the advocacy group ``Focus on the Family,'' said on ABC's ``This Week'' program that Specter ``is a problem and he must be derailed.''

Specter, who is in line to be chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said on CBS's ``Face the Nation'' that his comment reflected the ``political fact'' that Republicans, with 55 seats in the chamber, are five votes short of the 60 needed to prevent Democrats from blocking nominations through unlimited debate, a tactic known as a filibuster.


Specter, who backs a woman's right to have an abortion, said his critics were ``the same people who came to Pennsylvania from all over the country to try to defeat me in the primary election.''

``And they were unsuccessful,'' he said. ``They do not like my independence.''

Rove said Specter promised that ``every one of the president's nominees would receive a prompt hearing, a vote in the committee within a reasonable period of time, and that his appellate nominees would all be brought to the floor for an up-or- down decision on the floor.''

``Senator Specter's a man of his word, and we'll take him at his word,'' Rove said on Fox.


bloomberg.com