Karl Rove,
President Bush's close friend and chief political
strategist, plans to leave the White House at the end
of August, joining a lengthening line of senior
officials heading for the exits in the final 1½
years of the administration.
On board with
Bush since the beginning of his political career in Texas,
Rove was nicknamed ''the architect'' and ''boy genius'' by
the president for designing the strategy that twice
won him the White House. Critics call Rove ''Bush's
brain.''
A criminal
investigation put Rove under scrutiny for months during the
investigation into the leak of a CIA operative's name but he
was never charged with any crime. In a more recent
controversy, Rove, citing executive privilege, has
refused to testify before Congress about the firing of
U.S. attorneys.
Bush was expected
to make a statement Monday with Rove. Later Monday,
Rove, his wife and their son were to accompany Bush on Air
Force One when the president flies to Texas for his
vacation.
Rove's departure
reinforces Bush's lame-duck stature and declining
influence, particularly with Democrats in control on Capitol
hill.
''Obviously it's
a big loss to us,'' White House deputy press secretary
Dana Perino said. ''He's a great colleague, a good friend,
and a brilliant mind. He will be greatly missed, but
we know he wouldn't be going if he wasn't sure this
was the right time to be giving more to his family,
his wife Darby and their son. He will continue to be one of
the president's greatest friends.''
Since Democrats
won control of Congress in November, some top
administration officials have announced their resignations.
Among those who have left are White House counselor
Dan Bartlett, budget director Rob Portman, chief White
House attorney Harriet Miers, political director Sara
Taylor, deputy national security adviser J.D. Crouch and
Meghan O'Sullivan, another deputy national security
adviser who worked on Iraq. Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld was forced out immediately after the election
as the unpopular war in Iraq dragged on.
Rove became one
of Washington's most influential figures during Bush's
presidency. He is known as a ruthless political warrior who
has an encyclopedic command of political minutiae and
a wonkish love of policy. Rove met Bush in the early
1970s, when both men were in their 20s.
Once inside the
White House, Rove grew into a right-hand man.
Rove is expected
to write a book after he leaves. He disclosed his
departure in an interview with The Wall Street Journal.
He said he
decided to leave after White House Chief of Staff Joshua
Bolten told senior aides that if they stayed past Labor Day
they would be obliged to remain through the end of the
president's term in January 2009.
''I just think
it's time,'' Rove said in an interview at his home on
Saturday. He first floated the idea of leaving to Bush a
year ago, the newspaper said, and friends confirmed
he'd been talking about it even earlier. However, he
said he didn't want to depart right after the
Democrats regained control of Congress and then got drawn
into policy battles over the Iraq war and immigration.
''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,'' said Rove, who has been in the White House
since Bush took office in 2001.
Rove's son
attends college in San Antonio and he said he and his wife
plan to spend much of their time at their nearby home in
Ingram.
Rove, currently
the deputy White House chief of staff, has been the
president's political guru for years and worked with Bush
since he first ran for governor of Texas in 1993.
Even as he
discussed his departure, Rove remained characteristically
sunny. This quality of unrelenting optimism about the
president, which matches Bush's own upbeat,
never-admit-disappointment nature, has at times gotten
Rove into trouble. Up to the end of the 2006 midterm
elections, the political guru predicted a Republican win.
That of course was not to be, and there was grumbling
that Rove wasn't on his game during those elections as
much as he had been before.
In the interview,
Rove predicted Bush will regain his popularity, which
has sunk to record lows because of the war in Iraq.
Rove also
predicted conditions in Iraq would improve and that the
Democrats would nominate Hillary Rodham Clinton for
president, calling her ''a tough, tenacious, fatally
flawed candidate.''
Rove does not
intend to work for any candidate in the 2008 presidential
election, White House press secretary Tony Snow said.
Rove testified
before a federal grand jury in the investigation into the
leak of the name of Valerie Plame, a CIA officer whose
husband was a critic of the war in Iraq. That
investigation led to the conviction of I. Lewis
''Scooter'' Libby on charges of lying and obstructing
justice. Plame contends the White House was trying to
discredit her husband.
Attorneys for
Libby told jurors at the onset of his trial that Libby was
the victim of a conspiracy to protect Rove. Details of any
save-Rove conspiracy were promised but never
materialized.
The most explicit
testimony on Rove came from columnist Robert Novak, who
outed Plame in a July 2003 column. He testified that Rove, a
frequent source, was one of two officials who told him
about Plame. Libby, with whom he seldom spoke, was not
a source.
Rove, though, was
not indicted after testifying five times before the
grand jury, occasionally correcting misstatements he made in
his earlier testimony.
The jury in
Libby's trial did not hear that testimony, nor did it hear
that Rove is credited as an architect of Republican
political victories and has been accused by opponents
of playing dirty tricks.
All that jurors
heard is that Rove leaked Plame's identity and, from the
outset, got political cover from the White House. He was
never charged with a crime. (Terence Hunt, AP)
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