Nominations now being accepted for Democrats who also use dirty  
tricks......
..
 
The Atlantic
 
Why Karl Rove Uses Dirty Tricks: They Work
Karl Rove reportedly hinted that Hillary Clinton may have brain  damage 
from a fall—then quickly backed away. His history suggests it's a  calculated 
maneuver. 
_Peter Beinart_ (http://www.theatlantic.com/peter-beinart/)  May 13 2014

 
 
Karl Rove now denies reports that he said Hillary Clinton may have brain  
damage. “I never used that phrase,” _he  said on Fox News_ 
(http://www.politico.com/story/2014/05/karl-rove-hillary-clinton-remarks-106621.html?hp=f1)
 . 
True. What Rove said was, “Thirty days in the hospital?  And when she 
reappears, she’s wearing glasses that are only for people who have  traumatic 
brain injury? We need to know what’s up with that.” 
In other words, Rove didn’t say Hillary Clinton has brain damage. He hinted 
 it, thus giving himself deniability while ensuring that the slur lingers 
in the  public mind. Which is what he’s been doing his entire career. 
In 2004, _Joshua  Green reported_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2004/11/karl-rove-in-a-corner/303537/?single_page=true)
  in The Atlantic 
that Texas insiders accused Rove of  spreading allegations that his rival, 
Republican consultant John Weaver, had  made a pass at a young man at a GOP 
event. Green also _quoted_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/05/the-man-karl-rove-couldnt-beat/238873/)
   an aide to a 1994 state 
Supreme Court candidate in Alabama who accused Rove of  having quietly 
insinuated 
that his boss was a pedophile. Similarly, when George  W. Bush ran for 
governor of Texas that same year, rumors swirled about the  sexual orientation 
of 
incumbent Ann Richards. “No one ever traced the character  assassination to 
Rove,” _wrote  Bush biographer Louis Dubose_ 
(http://thinkprogress.org/election/2014/05/13/3437277/karl-rove-smear-hillary-clinton/)
 , “Yet no one 
doubts that Rove was behind it.”  Most famously, when Bush was fighting for his 
life against a surging John McCain  in South Carolina in 2000, fliers, 
emails, and push polls accused McCain of  having fathered an African-American “
love child” (he had actually adopted a girl  from Bangladesh) and of suffering 
from mental instability as a result of his  incarceration in Vietnam. 
McCain staffers, and McCain’s daughter, have _accused_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/29/meghan-mccain-karl-rove-book_n_1552759.html)
   Rove of 
orchestrating the rumors; Rove _denies_ 
(http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0310/34075.html)  any  involvement. 
Why does Rove allegedly smear his opponents this way? Because it works.  
Consider the Clinton “brain damage” story. Right now, the press is slamming 
Rove  for his vicious, outlandish comments. But they’re also talking about 
Clinton’s  health problems as secretary of state, disrupting the story she 
wants to tell  about her time in Foggy Bottom in her forthcoming memoir.
 
Assuming she runs for president, the press will investigate Clinton’s 
medical  history and age no matter what Rove says. But he’s now planted 
questions—
about  the December 2012 blood clot that forced her into the hospital, and 
about her  mental condition as she ages—that will lurk in journalists’ 
minds as they do  that reporting. If she has a moment of Rick Perry-like 
forgetfulness sometime  between now and the fall of 2016, Rove’s comments make 
it 
more likely that  voters will wonder whether she’s still with it mentally.   
Political consultants create narratives about the candidates they want to  
defeat: Al Gore fudged the truth; John Kerry was an elitist; Barack Obama 
wasn’t  fully American; Mitt Romney didn’t care about ordinary people. Once 
you kindle  public suspicion about your opponent, it’s easy to keep throwing 
logs on the  fire. On the eve of the memoir that will launch Hillary’s 
pre-campaign public  relations blitz, Karl Rove is starting that process now, 
despite having no  evidence for the storyline he wants to convey. 
For better—but mostly for worse—campaign 2016 is already  here.

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