Friday, November 04, 2005

Why Is Karl Rove Still Working at the White House?
Rove-a-Palooza/The Fall Out

Salon's War Room asks just that question:
The counselor to the president has the answer: Bush won't be forced into firing Rove by "catcalls in Washington," Dan Bartlett tells the Washington Times. "It would be deeply disrespectful of him personally and the investigation that is going on more broadly for us to be making presumptions about something we don't know the outcome of."

So there you have it. Firing Rove -- despite the undisputed evidence that he leaked Plame's identity to Robert Novak and Matthew Cooper, despite the fact that he failed to mention his leak to Cooper the first time he testified before the grand jury, despite the fact that he apparently lied about his involvement to Scott McClellan, despite the fact that McClellan assured the nation that anyone involved in the leak would be fired and despite the fact that the president made similar assurances -- well, firing Rove now would amount to dissing Karl.
Who's running the show there? Oh, yeah, I forgot... Rove. The same post has this legal update from the NYTimes:
Fitzgerald is still holding out the possibility of filing criminal charges against Rove, although the New York Times reports this morning that the scope of his investigation has narrowed. At one point, the Times says, Fitzgerald was considering whether Rove lied to Bush about his involvement in outing Plame -- a line of inquiry that led to discussions between the prosecutor and the president's personal lawyer. But now sources close to the case tell the Times that Fitzgerald is focused solely on whether Rove intentionally misled the grand jury when he failed to mention, during his initial testimony in February 2004, that he had leaked Plame's identity to Cooper.


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