Senate rejects bid to restrict Rove access
Democrats foiled on documents
Protesters held signs during a rally against presidential adviser Karl Rove in front of the White House yesterday. The rally was organized by MoveOn.org Political Action.
By Rick Klein, Globe Staff | July 15, 2005
WASHINGTON -- The Senate yesterday turned back a Democratic-led attempt to deny White House aide Karl Rove access to classified documents, as the dispute over the revelation that President Bush's top political adviser spread information about a covert CIA agent reached a new level of bitter partisan sniping.
The Democratic bill aimed at revoking Rove's security clearance was part of the party's growing campaign to highlight the disclosure that Rove gave information about the covert CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson to Time magazine reporter Matthew Cooper. Wilson's husband, former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV, came to the Capitol yesterday at the invitation of Democrats to call on Bush to fire Rove. ''Karl Rove made his bones doing political dirty tricks," Wilson said, noting that his wife now must work in a different capacity at the CIA because her cover has been blown.
Rove, the architect of George W. Bush's rise to the presidency, exercises virtually unprecedented control over Republican Party politics, and his fall from power would leave an enormous void in the GOP. The White House and Republicans in Congress are trying to ride out the furor.
After Democrats introduced their bill seeking to revoke Rove's credentials, GOP leaders countered with a bill to bar Senate minority leader Harry Reid from security clearance because he once mentioned a classified FBI report on the Senate floor.
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http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2005/07/15/senate_rejects_bid_to_restrict_rove_access/