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Wednesday, May 17, 2006
Mr. Rove Goes to Capitol Hill
Karl Rove was dispatched Wedneday to Capitol Hill to lobby House Republicans opposed to President Bush’s proposed guest worker program that could lead to citizenship for illegal immigrants. The session, according to White House spokesman Tony Snow, was “hopeful, optimistic and positive.” But Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., and an opponent of the guest worker idea, offered a less upbeat review of the 30-minute session with the House Republican Conference. “Karl Rove had his hat handed to him,” Issa told reporters. Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, said Rove’s appearance was not a “persuasive event.” “If it was about Karl Rove seeking to convince members of Congress after debate that he’s right and we’re wrong it would have been better not to have the meeting,” King said. Two sources who were at the meeting, speaking on condition of anonymity because it was a private session, said Rove made no progress in luring support for the guest worker concept. “They made arguments prefaced by, ‘Listen, in my district…,’” a congressional staffer said of how some attendees noted that there is no way they could support a guest worker program. Sources at the Wednesday GOP session with Rove, including an administration-friendly adviser, said some lawmakers – including Reps. J.D. Hayworth, R-Arizona, and Elton Gallegly, R-Calif., - stood to voice their opposition to the guest worker provision, but did so in respectful tones. “There was a spirit of we’re all on the same team,” the source said. Rep. Ric Keller, R-Florida, asked the long-term question: What can be done to bolster economies of other nations so that their citizens won’t feel the need to head north. Rove told lawmakers that Mexico’s economy is growing, partly as a result of the North American Free Trade Agreement. At the White House after the meeting, Snow, who did not attend the session, called it a positive event. “I’ve seen some talk that maybe this was going to be a highly contentious meeting,” Snow said. “The readout I get is that it was not at all. It was respectful.” Snow added, “People were obviously having exchanges of views on things.”
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White House word play
The new spokesman for the White House has come up with a new way to say nothing.
Tony Snow opted for Yiddish today in continuing the administration’s strategy of not saying anything about top adviser Karl Rove’s potential legal problems stemming from a special prosecutor’s investigation of the leak of a CIA operative’s name.
“What I do know is bubkes,” Snow said, using the Yiddish word for nothing.
And he offered an alibi for why he might not be up to speed on any breaking developments concerning Rove.
“As far as I can tell nothing has changed,” he told reporters this morning, “but I don’t want to give you a steer on it because I was standing out there giving TV interviews this morning during senior staff meeting.”
Out on the South Lawn, President Bush today joined in the White House word play, offering this new term while welcoming Winter Olympic team members:
“We want to thank all the dudes and dudesses of the snowboarders who are here.”
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