Contact: Richard A. Viguerie, ConservativesBetrayed.com, Bob Sturm, 703-392-7676, Vi Shields, 703-906-6542
MANASSAS, Virginia, Aug. 13 /Christian Newswire/ -- The following is a statement from Richard A. Viguerie, author of Conservatives Betrayed: How George W. Bush and Other Big Government Republicans Hijacked the Conservative Cause (Bonus Books, 2006), on the resignation of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove:
"Karl Rove's departure from the White House is good news for conservatives. We may—may—have a more conservative Bush presidency with Rove back in Texas.
"As President Bush's chief political advisor, Karl Rove was a master in the care and feeding of conservative leaders, keeping them mostly silent as the Republican Party moved Left during the Bush presidency.
"He used the usual carrot and stick to do this. The carrot was access to the White House—and conservative leaders proved just as vulnerable as others to the lure of a photo op with the President, lunch in the West Wing, or a returned phone call from Karl Rove. The stick was fear—speak out, and not only will you lose any hope of access, you will be branded as an extremist, or someone who's helping the Democrats by speaking out.
"Using both carrot and stick, Karl Rove was able to silence or get the support of most conservative leaders as President Bush and congressional Republicans greatly expanded the size and reach of the federal government, including (but certainly not limited to)…
· No Child Left Behind
· McCain-Feingold
· Prescription drug benefits
· Nation-building on a scale never attempted before
· Farm subsidies
· Steel tariffs
· Massive federal deficits
"Yes, Karl Rove was a political genius—he was, after all, the successful architect of Bush's election in 2000 and reelection in 2004. But as the President's chief policy advisor, Rove was the architect of George W. Bush's betrayal of the conservative cause.
"Karl Rove's biggest failure was to leave the White House without achieving his stated goal of establishing the Republicans as America's permanent governing party. To even mention that today—after the 2006 elections, President Bush's plummeting poll numbers and the GOP's bleak prospects for 2008—brings embarrassment or laughter, depending on your political viewpoint. No wonder Karl Rove wants to forget about those boasts.
"Rove failed in that goal primarily because he attempted to advance the Republican Party by using raw, naked political power and bribing voters. He copied the Democrats and was more successful than them—for a while. But then conservatives and independents caught on to his game. We started rebelling, first over Harriet Miers and most recently over the amnesty bill. Meanwhile, the Republican Party had lost its "brand" as the party of small government.
"How do we recover from the Rove Era? We have to reject the bribing of voters and instead build on President Reagan's legacy. We must re-establish the conservative movement (and the Republican Party, if it wishes to survive) as the movement and party of ideas, empowering people instead of government, and with a strong national defense but no more nation-building.
"Bush's brain" will soon be gone. Let's hope that wiser counsel prevails in the White House in the future, but let's not depend on that. We conservatives have work to do."