The excerpt is from page 2 of the biographical sketch. All of it is concisely informative. In Salon.
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http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2005/08/11/novak/index1.html .... Novak lives and breathes the nuts and bolts of politics, so it was somewhat startling when
he held a public conversion to Catholicism from Judaism in 1998. He was raised as a Jew in Joliet, Ill., but
his columns have been almost uniformly hostile to Israel. No one had ever seen his spiritual side before. His conversion ceremony at St. Patrick's in Washington was packed with invited guests, liberals and conservatives alike, with whom he has appeared on talk shows, from Fred Barnes to Margaret Carlson.
Novak's conversion was more than met the eye, as he became a member of the tightly knit far-right Catholic coterie clustered in Washington. Andrew Sullivan, the conservative Catholic writer, observed: "Perhaps the least-known aspect of Robert Novak's public persona is that he is
a convert not just to Catholicism but to its most hard-line sect, Opus Dei. It helps explain Novak's occasional, weird digressions into defenses of the most far-right social causes, and also why those columns appear, without this context, to be, well, slightly unhinged."
Just as the children of many notables in Washington land jobs in politics or government, so
Novak's son Alex surfaced as the marketing director of Regnery Publishing, the conservative book imprint. Since Alex has held his position,
his father has promoted four Regnery books in his columns and on TV shows. During the 2004 campaign, Novak went all-out to hype Regnery's big product of the season, "Unfit for Command," a smear job of John Kerry's war record, by the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth.
Regnery's owner, Tom Phillips, also owns Eagle Publishing, which is the distributor of Novak's newsletter.
For years, Novak has used his various platforms to promote whatever causes and individuals he deems fit. Along the way,
he has fostered any number of false assertions, accusations and innuendoes without any consequences to his standing in Washington. In 1989, he published a malicious rumor promoted by operatives at the Republican National Committee about the supposed sexual orientation of then House Majority Leader Tom Foley, referring to "the alleged homosexuality of one Democrat who might move up the succession ladder." Foley felt prompted to declare: "I am, of course, not a homosexual." ....
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