Karl Rove's America
By PAUL KRUGMAN
New York Times: Published: July 15, 2005
John
Gibson of Fox News says that Karl Rove should be given a medal. I agree: Mr.
Rove should receive a medal from the American Political Science Association for
his pioneering discoveries about modern American politics. The medal can, if
necessary, be delivered to his prison cell.
What Mr. Rove
understood, long before the rest of us, is that we're
not living in the America of the past, where even partisans sometimes changed
their views when faced with the facts. Instead, we're
living in a country in which there is no longer such a thing as nonpolitical
truth. In particular, there are now few, if any, limits to what conservative
politicians can get away with: the faithful will follow the twists and turns of
the party line with a loyalty that would have pleased the Comintern.
I first realized that we were living in Karl Rove's America during the 2000 presidential campaign, when George W.
Bush began saying things about Social Security privatization and tax cuts that
were simply false. At first, I thought the Bush campaign was making a big
mistake - that these blatant falsehoods would be condemned by prominent
Republican politicians and Republican economists, especially those who had
spent years building reputations as advocates of fiscal responsibility. In
fact, with hardly any exceptions they lined up to praise Mr. Bush's
proposals.
But the real demonstration that Mr. Rove
understands American politics better than any pundit came after 9/11.
Every time I read a lament for the post-9/11
era of national unity, I wonder what people are talking about. On the issues I
was watching, the Republicans' exploitation
of the atrocity began while ground zero was still smoldering.
Mr. Rove has been much criticized for saying
that liberals responded to the attack by wanting to offer the terrorists
therapy - but what he said about conservatives, that they "saw the
savagery of 9/11 and the attacks and prepared for war," is equally false.
What many of them actually saw was a domestic political opportunity - and none
more so than Mr. Rove.
A less insightful political strategist might
have hesitated right after 9/11 before using it to cast the Democrats as weak
on national security. After all, there were no facts to support that
accusation.
But Mr. Rove understood that the facts were
irrelevant. For one thing, he knew he could count on the administration's
supporters to obediently accept a changing story line. Read the
before-and-after columns by pro-administration pundits about Iraq: before the war they castigated the C.I.A. for
understating the threat posed by Saddam's
W.M.D.; after the war they castigated the C.I.A. for exaggerating the very same
threat.
Mr. Rove also understands, better than anyone
else in American politics, the power of smear tactics. Attacks on someone who
contradicts the official line don't have to be
true, or even plausible, to undermine that person's
effectiveness. All they have to do is get a lot of media play, and they'll
create the sense that there must be something wrong with the guy.
And now we know just how far he was willing
to go with these smear tactics: as part of the effort to discredit Joseph
Wilson IV, Mr. Rove leaked the fact that Mr. Wilson's
wife worked for the C.I.A. I don't know whether
Mr. Rove can be convicted of a crime, but there's
no question that he damaged national security for partisan advantage. If a
Democrat had done that, Republicans would call it treason.
But what we're
getting, instead, is yet another impressive demonstration that these days,
truth is political. One after another, prominent Republicans and conservative
pundits have declared their allegiance to the party line. They haven't
just gone along with the diversionary tactics, like the irrelevant questions
about whether Mr. Rove used Valerie Wilson's name in
identifying her (Robert Novak later identified her by her maiden name, Valerie Plame), or the false,
easily refuted claim that Mr. Wilson lied about who sent him to Niger. They're
now a chorus, praising Mr. Rove as a patriotic whistle-blower.
Ultimately, this isn't
just about Mr. Rove. It's also about Mr. Bush, who has always known that his
trusted political adviser - a disciple of the late Lee Atwater, whose smear
tactics helped President Bush's father win
the 1988 election - is a thug, and obviously made no attempt to find out if he
was the leaker.
Most of all, it's
about what has happened to America. How did our political system get to this point?