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Karl Rove took a victory lap at an SRO lunch at the Conservative Political Action
Committee meeting at the Ronald Reagan building in Washington on Thursday. After
a glowing introduction by Wayne LaPierre of the National Rifle Association, Rove
proclaimed "conservatism as the dominant political creed in America,"
but warned Republicans not to get complacent or grow "tired and timid."
He recalled the dark days when the Democrats were dominant and cautioned that
that could happen again if they let down their guard. The new White House deputy
chief of staff also called on conservatives to "seize the mantle of idealism."
Tired and timid are two adjectives never applied to Rove. The architect of
the Bush victories in 2000 and 2004 came through the ranks of college Republicans
with the late Lee Atwater, and their admitted and alleged dirty tricks are the
legends many young political operatives dream of pulling off. So when Jeff Gannon,
White House "reporter" for Talon "News," was unmasked last
week, the leap to a possible Rove connection was unavoidable. Gannon says that
he met Rove only once, at a White House Christmas party, and Gannon is kind
of small potatoes for Rove at this point in his career.
But Rove's dominance of White House and Republican politics, Gannon's aggressively
partisan work and the ease with which he got day passes for the White House
press room the past two years make it hard to believe that he wasn't at least
implicitly sanctioned by the "boy genius." Rove, who rarely gave on-the-record
interviews to the MSM (mainstream media), had time to talk to GOPUSA, which
owns Talon.
GOPUSA and Talon are both owned by Bobby Eberle, a Texas Republican and business
associate of conservative direct-mail guru Bruce Eberle who says that Bobby
is from the "Texas branch of the Eberle clan." Bobby Eberle told The
New York Times that he created Talon to build a news service with a conservative
slant and "if someone were to see 'GOPUSA,' there's an instant built-in
bias there." No kidding.
Some of the real reporters in the White House pressroom were apparently annoyed
at Gannon's presence and his softball, partisan questions, but considered him
only a minor irritant. One told me he thought of Gannon as a balance for the
opinionated liberal questions of Hearst's Helen Thomas. But what Gannon was
up to was not just writing opinion columns or using a different technique to
get information. He was a player in Republican campaigns and his work in the
South Dakota Senate race illustrates the role he played. It is also a classic
example of how political operatives are using the brave new world of the Internet
and the blogosphere. Gannon and Talon News appear to be mini-Drudge reports;
a "news" source which partisans use to put out negative information,
get the attention of the bloggers, talk radio and then the MSM in a way that
mere press releases are unable to achieve.
One of Gannon's first projects was an attempt to discredit the South Dakota
Argus Leader, South Dakota's major paper, and its longtime political writer,
David Kranz. According to the National Journal, which reported on this last
November, Gannon wrote a series of articles in the summer of 2003 alleging that
Kranz, who went to college with Democratic Sen. Tom Daschle, was not only sympathetic
to him but was an actual part of the Daschle campaign. These articles then got
a huge amount of play on the blogs of John Lauck and Jason Van Beek, and were
picked up by other conservative sites and talk radio. The paper was bombarded
with messages about its bias and acknowledges that these had an impact on its
coverage.
Daschle opponent John Thune's campaign manager was Dick Wadham, an old political
crony of Karl Rove's; the kind of pal Rove could ask to hire his first cousin,
John Wood, a few years back. Wadham put the bloggers on the campaign payroll
and the symbiotic relationship between the campaign, the bloggers and "reporter"
Gannon continued. On September 29, Gannon broke the story that Daschle had claimed
a special tax exemption for a house in Washington and the bloggers jumped all
over it. According to a November 17 posting on South Dakota Politics –
a site that Van Beek, who has become a staffer for now-Sen. Thune, has bequeathed
to Lauck – "Jeff Gannon, whose reportage had a dramatic impact on
the Daschle v. Thune race (his story about Sen. Daschle signing a legal document
claiming to be a D.C. resident was published nearly the same day Thune began
to run an ad showing Daschle saying, "I'm a D.C. resident) has written
an analysis of the debacle."
Daschle aides told Roll Call, "This guy (Gannon) became the dumping ground
for opposition research." The connections are so strong that there is an
FEC challenge which could be a test case on the limits of the use of the Internet
in federal campaigns.
Gannon also had Thune on his radio show "Jeff Gannon's Washington,"
and the White House correspondent for Talon became touted as the "resident
D.C. expert on South Dakota politics" by the bloggers. Thune and Wadham
(who has been hired by aspiring White House Republican Sen. George Allen) have
become go-to guys on the use of blogs in campaigns. Thune was cited in The New
York Times as introducing "Senators to the meaning of 'blogging,' explaining
the basics of self-published online political commentary and arguing that it
can affect public opinion."
This week Democrats, who have serious case of Rove envy, went a little nuts
and started sending around information and graphic pictures of Gannon and his
porn Web sites. But it is the more routine part of Gannon's life that deserves
serious scrutiny. Planting or even just sanctioning a political operative in
the WH press room is a dangerous precedent and Karl Rove's hope to become a
respected policymaker will be hampered if the dirty tricks from his political
past are more apparent than his desire to spread liberty around the globe.
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