[Mb-civic] Rove Gives Up Policy Post in Shake-Up - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Apr 20 05:46:09 PDT 2006
Rove Gives Up Policy Post in Shake-Up
McClellan Resigns; New Chief of Staff Moves Quickly to Change West Wing
By Peter Baker and Jim VandeHei
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, April 20, 2006; A01
President Bush's new chief of staff accelerated his election-year White
House shake-up yesterday as Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove surrendered
the policy management duties he assumed last year and press secretary
Scott McClellan resigned as the public face of an administration under fire.
Rove, who steered Bush to two national election victories, will retain
his title but focus on broad strategy and politics, while Joel D. Kaplan
takes over as deputy White House chief of staff running the day-to-day
policy process. To replace McClellan, Republican strategists said the
White House is considering Fox News radio host Tony Snow and former Iraq
occupation spokesman Dan Senor.
The moves effectively diminished or eliminated the roles of the two
presidential aides most familiar to the general public, as newly
installed White House Chief of Staff Joshua B. Bolten seeks to rescue
the remainder of Bush's presidency. Coupled with other changes already
announced and still in the works, Bolten hopes to demonstrate to the
public and the Republican-led Congress that it will no longer be
business as usual in a White House afflicted by political defeats, an
overseas war and shrinking public support.
At the same time, the changes made public so far mainly have moved
around figures who have been inside the Bush orbit for years, and White
House officials made clear yesterday that no major shifts in policy are
envisioned. With midterm congressional elections looming, strategists
said the main goal was to make public gestures that would restore faith
in Bush's ability to lead.
"The decision isn't one looking back at past performance or judgment,"
said White House counselor Dan Bartlett. "It was one looking forward.
Josh is reenergizing and rebuilding his staff for the next thousand days."
The reshuffling, the most significant of Bush's second term, got
underway when the president appointed Bolten to replace Andrew H. Card
Jr. as his chief aide. Bolten, who took over Friday afternoon, has moved
quickly to restructure the West Wing. On Monday, he invited aides
already thinking of leaving to submit resignations. On Tuesday, he
installed U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman to take over his job as
director of the Office of Management and Budget.
Aides said no further moves will be announced this week but anticipate
more next week, hoping that stretching them out over time will provide
momentum. "People have been watching this TV series for a long time, and
it helps to plug in some new characters from time to time," said Bush
political adviser Mark McKinnon. "Gets folks to tune back in and take a
fresh look."
Bolten is still eyeing the White House legislative affairs office in
hopes of improving relations with congressional Republicans. Bolten has
privately expressed criticism to colleagues about the operation of chief
White House lobbyist Candida Wolf, and it remained uncertain whether she
would stay. The White House has also been interested in finding a
replacement for Treasury Secretary John W. Snow.
A senior White House official said a lot of staff members remain
uncertain. Bolten's call for resignations, the official said, has a lot
of aides who had not been contemplating departing now planning to spend
this weekend considering it. Bolten has said he will keep Card's
schedule and structure until the middle of next week, and then put his
own in place.
The biggest changes so far came with Rove's shift and McClellan's
departure. Rove has been the driving force of the Bush presidency from
its inception, and last year he added the title of deputy chief of staff
for policy to his portfolio. But some Republicans saw it as a poor fit
as the operation's vision man occupied himself with the trains-on-time
responsibilities of the new job.
Among people close to the White House and in Republican circles around
Washington, there remained debate whether the move should be regarded as
a demotion or reassignment. The answer will remain unknown until
Bolten's operation has more time to prove itself. But there was
agreement that the move was a negative verdict on the status quo.
"He's the best thinker in our party, and in the last year he's been
doing all the staffing memos and making sure the paperwork is done on
time and all that," said a senior administration official glad to see
Rove return to his strong suit.
By turning over the daily policy management to Kaplan, Rove will free
himself up to concentrate more on the midterm elections, which are
crucial to Bush's fortunes, but he will remain an influential voice in
broader policy discussions, as well. "That will leave Karl more time to
focus on truly strategic policy at a critical time for the presidency,"
White House spokesman Ken Lisaius said.
Rove, 55, who has been Bush's most important adviser for many years,
told associates he knew his shift might be seen as a demotion but agreed
with Bolten that he was bogged down by esoteric subjects distracting him
from strategy. A Republican close to Rove said the change was unrelated
to the CIA leak case, in which Rove remains under investigation, but was
meant to calm Republicans who fretted that the White House mishandled
issues such as the Dubai port deal and Hurricane Katrina.
"They needed to have the optics that there's going to be a change -- a
message-delivery change and a different approach to policy, particularly
domestic policy," the Republican said. "That's all it is. There's not
going to be any change in policy. It gets Washington talking about
different things."
Democrats dismissed the move. "President Bush doesn't seem to understand
that you can't just change the window dressing, you have to make changes
in the Bush administration's policies, which have undermined America's
security," said Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean.
While Rove's shift was disclosed on paper, Bush walked McClellan onto
the South Lawn yesterday morning before a trip to Alabama. "The White
House is going through a period of transition," McClellan said. "Change
can be helpful, and this is a good time and good position to help bring
about change. I am ready to move on."
McClellan, 38, who has been at Bush's side since Texas and served as
chief spokesman for the past two years and nine months, choked up
momentarily. Turning to the president, he said, "I have given it my all,
sir, and I've given you my all."
Bush responded with praise: "He handled his assignment with class,
integrity. He really represents the best of his family, our state and
our country. It's going to be hard to replace Scott."
In a moment of unfortunate symbolism for a troubled White House, Bush
and McClellan then boarded Marine One to fly to Andrews Air Force Base
-- only to have to disembark when the helicopter would not work.
Instead, the president departed by motorcade.
McClellan had told colleagues as recently as last month that he intended
to stay but told reporters aboard Air Force One yesterday that he began
reconsidering when Card stepped down and informed Bush of his decision
in an Oval Office meeting on Monday. "I didn't need much encouragement
to make this decision," he said.
With endless patience, McClellan has absorbed months of battering at
daily briefings over the president's second-term problems. Although he
never expressed it publicly, McClellan's colleagues said he was
frustrated that his credibility had been questioned after he relayed
Rove's assertion in 2003 that Bush's top adviser had nothing to do with
the leak of a CIA operative's identity -- a claim later discredited by
grand jury testimony.
McClellan said he would stay for two or three weeks as the White House
brings in a replacement. Republicans close to the White House identified
three main candidates: Tony Snow, Senor and former Pentagon spokeswoman
Victoria Clarke. Snow confirmed he is considering it, while Clarke said
she would not.
Replacing Rove in the job of deputy chief of staff for policy will be
Kaplan, who worked for Bolten in the first Bush campaign, in the White
House and then at OMB as deputy director. Bolten considers Kaplan, 36,
his right hand and was the only one with a speaking role at Kaplan's
wedding this month, aside from Judge J. Michael Luttig of the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the 4th Circuit, who presided over the ceremony for his
former clerk.
Kaplan, who rushed back to Washington from a Hawaii honeymoon Tuesday
night, will be the third deputy along with Rove and Joseph W. Hagin, who
plans to stay but will also give up policy duties, colleagues said. A
Harvard Law graduate and former Marine, Kaplan also clerked for Supreme
Court Justice Antonin Scalia.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/19/AR2006041900897.html?nav=hcmodule
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20060420/cc656edd/attachment.htm
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list