GOP Leaders to Bush: 'Your Presidency is
Effectively Over'
Capital Hill Blue
By DOUG THOMPSON
November 4, 2005
A growing number of Republican leaders, party strategists and political
professional now privately tell President George W. Bush that his presidency
"is effectively over" unless he fires embattled White House advisor Karl Rove,
apologizes to the American people for misleading the country into war and
revamps his administration from top to bottom.
"The only show of unity we have now in the Republican Party is the belief
that the President has failed the party, the American people and the
presidency," says a longtime, and angry, GOP strategist.
With the public face of support for Bush eroding daily from even diehard
Republicans, the President faces mounting anger from within his party over the
path that may well lead to loss of control of Congress in the 2006 midterm
elections and the White House in 2008.
"This presidency is in trouble," says a senior White House aide. "Even
worse, I don't know if there is a way out of the trouble."
Congressional leaders journeyed to the White House before Bush left on his
South American tour this week to tell the President that his legislative agenda
on the Hill is dead, his latest Supreme Court nominee faces a tough
confirmation fight in the Senate and he is facing open revolt within party
ranks.
"The Speaker is having an increasingly difficult time holding his troops in
line," says a source within the office of House Speaker Dennis J. Hastert.
"Anger at the President grows exponentially with each passing day."
At a recent White House strategy session, internal party pollsters told the
President that his approval rating with Americans continues to slide and may be
irreversible, citing his failed Iraq war, the failed Supreme Court nomination
of Harriet Miers and his failure to deal decisively on a number of fronts,
including Hurricane Katrina, the economy and the Valerie Plame scandal.
In meetings, leaders and strategists have suggested a number of things that
Bush must do to try and save his presidency and GOP prospects in upcoming
elections, including:
- Apologize to the American people, Congress and our allies for misleading
them on the reasons for invading Iraq;
- Revamp the White House staff from top to bottom;
- Fire Rove.
"We keep coming back to Rove," says a GOP pollster. "He has escaped
indictment, so far, but the feeling within the party is that another shoe is
ready to drop and the longer he waits to jettison Rove the greater the damage.
As long as Karl Rove remains at the President's side, the Bush presidency is
effectively over and he is just riding out the days until the nation elects a
Democrat to replace him. Even with Rove gone the damage may be
irreparable."
Bush, however, has dug his heels in on Rove. When a GOP strategist suggested
last weekend that the President fire Rove, Bush exploded.
"You go to hell," he screamed at the strategist. "You can leave and you can
take the rest of these lily-livered motherfuckers with you!" The President then
stormed out of the room and refused to meet further with any other party
leaders or strategists.
Bush's escalating temper tantrums and his intransigence on political issues
increase Republican worries about the long term effects on both his presidency
and the party's prospects in upcoming elections.
"Right now, George W. Bush is the Republican Party's chief liability," says
a GOP strategist who has advised Presidential campaigns for 30 years. "The
entire political future of the party and perhaps the nation now rests on the
shoulders of a President that no one - Democrat or Republican - believes in or
trusts."
© Copyright 2005 by Capitol Hill Blue
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