Iowa must really love Karl Rove… NOT!

March 10th, 2008

(Here’s a bit about Karl Rove speaking in Iowa… Poor Iowa)

To say Karl Rove’s Sunday talk was emotionally charged would be an understatement.

Boos exuberantly punctuated the UI Lecture Committee’s introduction and dozens in the audience stood, turning their backs when President Bush’s former deputy chief of staff and top aide took the stage. A woman charged up an aisle, her hands shaking, as she called for Rove to be arrested. And in a row near the front, a veteran told a different 84-year-old veteran to “F— off” when he asked him to stop shouting.

“I’ve lived in Iowa City more than 60 years, and I have never been more ashamed than I am tonight of the disrespect shown by these people,” 84-year-old Bill Olin said.

Meanwhile, the “architect” on stage remained seemingly unshaken. Armed with a sarcastic humor and several quotations from prominent Democrats to support his contentions, Rove took on the audience of roughly 1,100 – telling a woman who yelled that that UI wanted the $40,000 speaking fee they paid back, simply, “You can’t have it.”

He told another man his comment showed, “a simple, stupid mind, with all due respect.”

“Look, you’ve had a chance to make your chants and protests and statements, and I want to have mine,” Rove told the audience.

But his critics gave him very little chance, repeatedly interrupting him to call him a liar and war criminal.

Sharon Benzoni, the UI Lecture Committee chairwoman, said she had hoped bringing the controversial figure would generate conversation, and she was pleased with the result.

“We feel like we really accomplished our goal of stirring up dialogue both inside the lecture hall and outside as people were leaving,” she said. “That’s what we wanted to do.”

As the president’s most trusted political strategist, Rove was ensconced in the White House before his August 2007 resignation with a indisputable influence over Oval Office policy – an influence that generated allegations of misdeed in his final year.

Rove resigned while under fire for his alleged involvement in what some see as political terminations of several U.S. attorneys, which was a controversy that also fueled calls for then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to resign. The UI College of Law had invited Gonzales to give last year’s commencement address, but officials said scheduling conflicts prevented his appearance.

Rove left the Bush administration after federal prosecutors decided they would not charge Rove with any crimes for his link to the outing for former CIA agent Valerie Plame.

Additionally, critics have lambasted Rove for his role in crafting communications leading up the invasion of Iraq – which was the first item on the agenda for moderator Frank Durham, a UI associate professor of journalism tasked with conducted the on-stage interview.

Durham asked how the former aide would have helped him answer a phone call he received from a woman grieving the death of a soldier, a woman who also blamed Durham for sponsoring Rove’s appearance.

Rove told him he’s handled plenty of situations like that – getting flags for mothers and stepmothers of those killed in combat.

“Have you ever shed a tear?” a member of the audience yelled.

“I’ve shed lots of tears, but I’ve also been inspired because most moms and dads believe their son or daughter did not die in vain,” Rove responded. He later added that he has seen great passion and commitment for the mission from loved ones of fallen soldiers – to which the audience booed.

They applauded, however, when Rove said Iraq “had nothing to do with 9/11.”

“What it had to do was change the circumstances in the 20th century of transatlantic terrorism,” Rove said.

The tense atmosphere was something Rove said he, as a controversial figure who worked for a controversial administration, expected before the talk .

He is so controversial that when officials at Choate Rosemary Hall, a Connecticut prep school, announced Rove would deliver the school’s 2008 commencement address, angry student and parent reaction led the school’s headmaster to change the forum to the question-and-answer address that occurred last month.

The UI campus protests were long orchestrated, with six community coalitions allying to form “The Karl Rove Welcoming Committee” which called on Iowa City police and UI police to detain Rove for treason, war crimes, and crimes against humanity until U.S. marshals could be dispatched to arrest him.

Other antiwar protesters prepared for Rove’s talk by gathering at a local restaurant to share original musical remonstrations, mostly inspired by 1960s protest songs by the likes of Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger.

But Rove, defending his own actions and those of the Bush administration to the end, said, “If we ignore the enemy and his plan, we do so at our own peril.”

He said he would be satisfied that the war in Iraq is won when it is a “stable, democratic ally on the global war on terror.”

E-mail DI reporter Kelsey Beltramea at:
kelsey-beltramea@uiowa.edu

Entry Filed under: More on Karl

6 Comments Add your own

  • 1. NaturalBornNeoCon  |  August 7th, 2008 at 1:13 am

    Rove Rumsfeld 2008

  • 2. recles  |  August 21st, 2008 at 4:02 pm

    It’s hard to believe when you see Karl Rove’s kindly face on TV that he served the same function for the Bush Administration as Hermann Goering did for Asolph Hitler—Minister of Propaganda.

  • 3. canemah  |  August 22nd, 2008 at 8:37 pm

    Those clowns at IU are overloaded with dumbass. I thought for a while I was reading about a daycare class. Overall a very biased article, useful only for wrapping mullet.

  • 4. jmanders2008  |  September 19th, 2008 at 2:49 am

    It’s ashamed that many of our Universities have become what they have over the last 50 years. This school and this community frankly should be ashamed of the kind of childish behavior demonstrated during Karl’s speech. People who are secure in what they believe don’t act like that. I don’t care what you disagree with. It is time that these schools, beginning with the faculties and staffs grow up and start acting like mature adults. You are not as smart as you think you are. Some of you will learn that in time. As for the rest of you, may God help you!

  • 5. braxxian  |  October 2nd, 2008 at 10:03 pm

    If ever a man deserved to be sitting in a cell for war crimes it is Rove. How this man is not only free, but allowed to profit from his deeds on FOX and other engagements is totally beyond me. It tells the world something about American justice.

  • 6. A.J.Sanchez-Ponte  |  October 8th, 2008 at 5:32 pm

    Dera Mr. Rove

    For the purpose to introduce myself, I’m an American Citizen, Argentinian born, 71 years old, who never been out of work a single day during the 45 years since my wife and I arrived in the USA, answer to the draft call in 1964, have two wonderful daughter, two grand children and one in the way, enjoy the privilige to own two homes ( one in Florida and one in New Hampshire ) I’m happily retired from a Senior Corporate Management position, visited numerous times South,Central America, the Caribbean and Europe forthe last twenty years or so as a results of my work related obligations as well as pleasure traveling, Medicare works extraordinarily well, Social Security checks for both my wife and I arrive everey month in time and in full, so is my Company’s retirement check, pay all my taxes, mortgage and all other citizen obligation in time and in full, paid for both my daughters college education without any assistance at all, managed our monies well and never felt that we were entitled to anything other than freedom and the opportunity to suceed.

    I’m extremely concerned that somehow politicians are going to screw it up and I think that they have already started.

    I,m also extremely concerned about the level of corruption within Goverment in general.

    Let me point out that both my wife and I were exposed to a tiranical and socialistic Goverment in Argentina ( Evita and Juan Peron) during our formative years, in fact from 12 to 18 years old, we suffered the consequences and are both fully aware of all the adverse consequences that follow, which still prevail today.

    As a side bar comment, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama remaind us of Evita and Juan Peron ie; Social programs and entitlements to be paid by those who succed in life, in other words the effluent, enterprising and educated folk.

    I have formed an opinion as to what have created the uncertainties, concerns and situation we live in this Country today and the dangers we are facing, ie: Socialism, Radicalism and Anarchy…!!!!, as various examples;

    a) Schools, Colleges and Universities philosophioes have turned into the typef “liberalism” that provides studens the tools to learn in the case of lawyers how to manipulate the law, regardless of any consequence, as oppose to dispense it honorably. In the case of MBA’s and related studies, how to irresponsibly manipulate markets , legally destroy companies and attain enormous profites on the back of honest business people and investors

    b) Much like In the Peron era in Argentina and still as of today
    the predominat factor in the minds of politicians in the USA have a common denominator and that is the exploitation of civic “IGNORANCE” .

    c) and as a direct result,regardles who becomes president
    ( especially Mr. Obama ) we project that all of those without health insurance today will be without it at the end of 4 years and those in poverty today will continue to suffer as well.
    Further, we suspect that the level of military intervention in the Middle East today will remain the same for more years than a Presidential cycle.

    And by the way, no sooner the elections are over we will chage our affiliation with the Republican Party to Independent.

    Respectfully

    A.J. Sanchez Ponte

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