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What If Karl Rove Were A Democrat?
By Roger Aronoff
July 28, 2005
Page 2 of 2
- Senator John Kerry (D-MA) identified a covert CIA officer by name during confirmation hearings for John Bolton as UN ambassador. The committee chairman had repeatedly requested that the agent not be named.
- John Deutsch, the CIA director under former President Clinton, "wrote, stored and accessed classified memos on the same unsecured home computer that he used to surf the Internet."
- A Federal Appeals Court said that New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, "was a likely source of disparaging leaks about former Los Alamos scientist Wen Ho Lee," while Richardson was Energy Secretary under President Clinton. The case involved national security information.
- Democratic Senators Rockefeller and Wyden improperly disclosed the existence of a classified spy satellite last year while on the floor of the Senate, while expressing opposition to what they felt was too much spending by the Bush administration.
- Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont resigned from the Senate Intelligence Committee "in disgrace" in the 1980's for leaking a draft report on the so-called Iran-Contra investigation. It included information on how the CIA gathered intelligence.


- Sandy Berger, former National Security Adviser under President Clinton, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor in federal court. Berger admitted that he intentionally took and destroyed copies of classified documents from the National Archives. He had stuffed some in his pants, cut some of them up with scissors, and lied to the investigators and the American public. He claimed he was reviewing Clinton administration documents to decide which ones to provide to the commission investigating the 9/11 attacks on Washington D.C. and New York. He said it had been "an honest mistake" and that he "deeply regrets" his actions.
Time will tell how these episodes compare to the actions of Karl Rove and others in the Bush administration. But the public evidence against Rove at this point is mighty thin and the case seems minor compared to the incidents cited above. We can only conclude that the media frenzy is disproportionate to the facts of the case, and that coverage of Rove represents a clear double standard by reporters eager to go after Republicans but willing to ignore worse transgressions by Democrats. If Karl Rove were a Democrat, he would be forgiven by the press and reporters would be returning to him for more juicy tidbits of information.
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Roger Aronoff is a media analyst with Accuracy in Media.
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Note -- The opinions expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions, views, and/or philosophy of GOPUSA. >> Back -- Page 1 2

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