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This is an archive article published on September 3, 2007

New book details infighting, discord in White House

Karl Rove told George W Bush before the 2000 election that it was a bad idea to name Dick Cheney as his running mate

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Karl Rove told George W Bush before the 2000 election that it was a bad idea to name Dick Cheney as his running mate, and Rove later raised objections to the nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court, according to a new book on the Bush presidency.

In Dead Certain: The Presidency of George Bush, journalist Robert Draper writes that Rove told Bush he should not tap Cheney for the Republican ticket: “Selecting Daddy’s top foreign-policy guru ran counter to message. It was worse than a safe pick—it was needy.”

But Bush did not care; he was comfortable with Cheney and “saw no harm in giving his VP unprecedented run of the place.” When Rove, President Bush’s top political adviser, expressed concerns about the Miers selection, he was “shouted down” and subsequently muted his objections, Draper writes, while other advisers did not realise the outcry the nomination would cause within the president’s conservative political base. It was John Roberts Jr, now the Chief Justice of the US, who suggested Miers to Bush as a possible SC justice, according to the book.

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Miers, the White House counsel and a Bush loyalist from Texas, did not want the job, but Bush and first lady Laura Bush prevailed on her to accept the nomination, Draper writes. After Miers withdrew in the face of the conservative furore, Judge Samuel Alito Jr was then selected and confirmed for the seat. Roberts rejected Draper’s report when asked about it last night.

“The account is not true,” said Supreme Court spokeswoman Kathy Arberg, after consulting with Roberts. “The chief justice did not suggest Harriet Miers to the president.” In recounting the Miers nomination and other controversies of the Bush presidency, Draper offers an intimate portrait of a White House racked by more internal dissent and infighting than is commonly portrayed and of a president who would, alternately, intensely review speeches line by line or act strangely disengaged from big issues. Draper, a national correspondent for GQ, first wrote about Bush in 1998, when he was the Texas governor.

He received unusual cooperation from the White House in preparing Dead Certain, which will hit bookstores tomorrow. In addition to conducting six interviews with the President, Draper said he also interviewed Rove, Cheney, Laura Bush and many senior White House and administration officials.

Draper writes that Bush was “gassed” after an 80-minute bike ride at his Crawford, Texas, ranch on the day before Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast and was largely silent during a subsequent video briefing from then FEMA Director Michael Brown and other top officials making preparations for the storm.

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