A couple of thoughts on the decision by Karl
Rove give up the deputy chief of staff for policy
designation.
What most people forget (after all, it was six years ago) was
that in Austin, there was the “Iron Triangle” of Karl
Rove, Joe Allbaugh, and Karen
Hughes, and then there were the “Three Amigos”: Rove,
Joshua Bolten, and Joel Kaplan.
The three men worked as a team on policy issues, and unlike past
White Houses, the long-term guys (Rove, Bolten, Dan
Bartlett) don’t care much about the titles. According to
sources both inside the White House and out, Rove was more than
happy to surrender the deputy slot to Kaplan, in part, because he
had taken the title to prevent others in the White House from
handing it to more liberal or less reliable folks.
“Karl’s first two choices for the deputy slot got passed over,
and that raised concerns with Karl,” says a current White House
source. “He likes policy, and he saw this as an opportunity to
block an Andy Card acolyte and at the same time
protect some turf for one his guys down the road. Kaplan is a
Bolten guy and he’s a Rove guy. This is not a problem for Karl or
anyone else.”
More of a problem may be the rumored move of Candida
Wolff from her job as White House director of legislative
affairs. Rumors have been swirling for weeks that her job was in
jeopardy, in part, because House leadership has been doing what it
can to push her out the door.
Wolff has taken the brunt of the criticism for perceived lack of
communications and chemistry with Congressional leadership for the
past six months. And there is talk that the White House was looking
to bring in a high visibility hire to smooth things over. Names
floated have included former Senators Dan Coats
and Phil Gramm, to name a couple. That
announcement may come as early as Thursday morning, leading into
the return of Congress next week.