Karl Rove: I wasn’t George Bush’s brain
GOP strategist defends ex-president’s intellect and his own political style
By Mike Celizic
TODAYshow.com contributor
updated 1 hour, 1 minute ago
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/35723068/ns/today-today_people/Most people would probably find it flattering to be called the brains behind the president of the United States. But not Karl Rove, the former senior adviser to President George W. Bush who has been called “Bush’s brain.”
The nickname, bestowed on Rove by Bush critics, isn’t a compliment to him but rather an insult to his former boss, Rove told TODAY’s Matt Lauer during an extensive interview he granted in conjunction with the publication of his book, “Courage and Consequence: My Life as a Conservative in the Fight.”
“I’ve known him for almost four decades. He is a really smart person. To suggest that I was his brain is derogatory about him,” Rove said in a preview of the interview that ran Friday on TODAY. The full interview will air Monday and Tuesday, March 8 and 9, on TODAY. On Tuesday, Rove will join Lauer live in the show’s Studio 1A in New York City.
In a review of the book, The Associated Press writes: “The former White House political adviser blames himself for not pushing back against claims that President George W. Bush had taken the country to war under false pretenses, calling it one of the worst mistakes he made during the Bush presidency. The president, he adds, did not knowingly mislead the American public about the existence of such weapons.”
Bush’s critics portrayed him as an intellectual lightweight who relied on Rove’s brains. Rove told Lauer that it’s a common tactic in politics.
“If you really want to diminish a candidate, depict him as the foil of his handler. This is as old in American politics as politics itself,” Rove said. “It’s easy to point at me. I’m convenient.”
Rove fiercely defends his old boss in his book and predicts that history will ultimately approve of Bush’s presidency, including his 2003 invasion of Iraq.