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Rove as a teenager was somehow involved in Watergate as a young staffer. Later, in Texas, he was caught bugging his own office and blaming it on the Democrats. That was when he was handling Bill Clemmons campaign against Mark White.
Mark White's manager was William McKinney, who later began working for Rove. McKinney is famous because it was his office that supplied the videotapes of Bush's debate training to Gore's camp. A staffer of McKinney's was convicted of lying to investigators about mailing the tapes. McKinney was promoted. Interestingly, McKinney stuck up for the staffer, even backing her story about what was in a package she was videotaped mailing. So if she lied, so did McKinney, and Rove had him promoted. He works for Bush in some capacity now.
Notice that the bug in the office in the 80s mirrored the real crimes of Richard Nixon, and the debate tapes scandal in 2000 mirrored the real crime of Reagan stealing Carter's debate notes in 80. Rove loves historical parallels. He modeled Bush's presidency after McKinley's. He models Bush speeches after Hitler's, and that's no accident.
None of the above is speculation, or denied even by the Republicans, or at least the ones who know what they are talking about. All of it is supported and documented. Both events were investigated by the FBI.
No question he was setting Burkett and Rather up, since they were both willing to drop the goods on Bush. Then there's the Hatfield claim about "Fortunate Son." Hatfield claimed Rove had given him some of the info about Bush and his cocaine conviction, then denied it when the book was released, probably so that they could get the info out there and then discredit the author, thus discrediting the info itself.
One more thing: When Gore's people turned over the debate tapes, Bush's people tried for a short time to make it work, and accused Gore of paying someone to steal the tapes. It was so obviously a stupid charge that even the media didn't go with it. They started asking the Bush camp if they had tried to set Gore up. One reporter at an impromptu outdoor press conference trapped Karen Hughes. He asked her if it was a setup, if anyone in the Bush camp knew about it beforehand, etc, and she denied everything. Then the reporter asked her if she would take a lie detector test over it. She froze. Her eyes widened in fear, her jaw dropped, and she turned pale. You could see what she was thinking: that refusing would reveal the lie, and taking the test would reveal the lie. She looked stunned and trapped for about ten seconds, then you could see her look at the camera, release she was being recorded, and blurt out "of course we would."
She was caught, and knew it, and if there was any true media in America that would have been the biggest story of the campaign. But the tape was never played again, as far as I know. If you didn't see it live, you never saw it. I wonder if that reporter is still alive these days...
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