Join Books.org — it's free

U.S. Politics in the Post Cold-War Era, U.S. - Political Biography, Politics & Government - General & Miscellaneous, U.S. Politics - General & Miscellaneous, U.S. Elections
The Architect: Karl Rove and the Master Plan for Absolute Power by James Moore — book cover

The Architect: Karl Rove and the Master Plan for Absolute Power

by James Moore, Wayne Slater
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

President George W. Bush dubbed Karl Rove “The Architect” for his skill in creating an unprecedented campaign and fund-raising machine. But Rove’s ambitions have always been far more sweeping—to build a right-wing dynasty that can dominate American politics for decades. Rove’s master plan imagines a political system so controlled by Republicans that it is resisted only by symbolic opposition.

In The Architect, James Moore and Wayne Slater, the bestselling authors of Bush’s Brain, return with an even more penetrating examination of Rove, his sweeping agenda, and the price he may have to pay for his audacity. Drawing on their decades-long study of Rove, they provide a rarely seen view of the politics of absolute power in Washington—how it is acquired, expanded, and turned to startling ends. Specifically, they unveil how Rove:

• Used lobbyist Jack Abramoff as a cat’s-paw to manage unruly legislators

• Energetically led the antigay marriage movement while protecting a family secret that made his stance bizarrely cynical

• Turned Christian churches into a gigantic vote delivery system, despite privately admitting to being a nonbeliever

• Repeatedly leaked information to harm political opponents, making him the man investigators most wanted to talk to when they began probing the Plame affair

• Was intimately involved in an international disinformation scheme to lead America to war

The Architect is an eye-opening and frequently shocking report on the maneuverings of a brilliant but morally ambiguous political strategist, and the first-ever in-depth look at a political operative striving to absolutely control the future—even if he risks losing everything.

Also available as an eBook

Synopsis

President George W. Bush dubbed Karl Rove “The Architect” for his skill in creating an unprecedented campaign and fund-raising machine. But Rove’s ambitions have always been far more sweeping—to build a right-wing dynasty that can dominate American politics for decades. Rove’s master plan imagines a political system so controlled by Republicans that it is resisted only by symbolic opposition.

In The Architect, James Moore and Wayne Slater, the bestselling authors of Bush’s Brain, return with an even more penetrating examination of Rove, his sweeping agenda, and the price he may have to pay for his audacity. Drawing on their decades-long study of Rove, they provide a rarely seen view of the politics of absolute power in Washington—how it is acquired, expanded, and turned to startling ends. Specifically, they unveil how Rove:

• Used lobbyist Jack Abramoff as a cat’s-paw to manage unruly legislators

• Energetically led the antigay marriage movement while protecting a family secret that made his stance bizarrely cynical

• Turned Christian churches into a gigantic vote delivery system, despite privately admitting to being a nonbeliever

• Repeatedly leaked information to harm political opponents, making him the man investigators most wanted to talk to when they began probing the Plame affair

• Was intimately involved in an international disinformation scheme to lead America to war

The Architect is an eye-opening and frequently shocking report on the maneuverings of a brilliant but morally ambiguous political strategist, and the first-ever in-depth look at a political operative striving to absolutely control the future—even if he risks losing everything.

Also available as an eBook

Publishers Weekly

This bold follow-up to journalists Moore and Slater's bestseller, Bush's Brain, takes a provocative look at how Karl Rove used George Bush's various campaigns and presidency to engineer nothing less than the assertion of a long-term Republican hegemony and the complete dismantling of the Democratic Party. To make their case, they draw on a wide range of materials, including interviews and reportage done by other journalists to demonstrate how Rove mobilized his party's base, forging an unlikely alliance between religious and economic conservatives, while mounting targeted assaults on gays and lesbians, trial lawyers and labor unions. Yet in this narrative, his bid for a complete realignment of American politics begins to derail with the failure of Bush's Social Security reform plan, the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina, the failed nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court and, most significantly, the implication of Rove in the leak of CIA employee Valerie Plame's identity. In this damning but scattered account, Rove remains an elusive, almost inhuman figure, despite short digressions about his relationship with his gay stepfather and his weekly brunches with members of the White House and RNC teams during the reelection campaign. The result is a compulsive page-turner that's bound to be divisive. (Sept. 12) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, James Moore

James Moore is the coauthor, with Wayne Slater, of the bestselling Bush’s Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential and the author of Bush’s War for Reelection. Formerly an Emmy Award–winning television news correspondent, he has traveled extensively with every presidential campaign since 1976.

Wayne Slater is a senior political writer and an award-winning reporter for The Dallas Morning News. Previously, he was the Austin bureau chief of the paper for fifteen years and has covered state and national politics since 1984.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Publishers Weekly

This bold follow-up to journalists Moore and Slater's bestseller, Bush's Brain, takes a provocative look at how Karl Rove used George Bush's various campaigns and presidency to engineer nothing less than the assertion of a long-term Republican hegemony and the complete dismantling of the Democratic Party. To make their case, they draw on a wide range of materials, including interviews and reportage done by other journalists to demonstrate how Rove mobilized his party's base, forging an unlikely alliance between religious and economic conservatives, while mounting targeted assaults on gays and lesbians, trial lawyers and labor unions. Yet in this narrative, his bid for a complete realignment of American politics begins to derail with the failure of Bush's Social Security reform plan, the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina, the failed nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court and, most significantly, the implication of Rove in the leak of CIA employee Valerie Plame's identity. In this damning but scattered account, Rove remains an elusive, almost inhuman figure, despite short digressions about his relationship with his gay stepfather and his weekly brunches with members of the White House and RNC teams during the reelection campaign. The result is a compulsive page-turner that's bound to be divisive. (Sept. 12) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

It's no secret that Republican strategist Karl Rove's goal is to ensure that Republicans control U.S. politics and policy for at least the next 30 years. Former TV news correspondent Moore and political writer Slater (coauthors, Bush's Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential) describe in detail how Rove maneuvers to accomplish his goal. They attempt to cast light on the more cynical elements of Rove's strategies. For example, Rove admits he does not value religious conservatives because their beliefs enrich public policy-instead, it's because their cohesion enables his politics. Wedge issues such as gay marriage and medical malpractice reform figure strongly in his strategies and, according to the authors, expose how Rove manipulates and mobilizes "the base," which allows a candidate to forget about "the middle." A few chapters are devoted to Rove's stumbles in recent months (e.g., Valerie Plame), but the authors make clear that Rove is still an active force in American politics whose influence will probably be felt for some time. This well-documented book is recommended for public and academic libraries with large political science or communications collections.-Jill Ortner, SUNY at Buffalo Libs. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A none-too-adulatory study of the man who has been called Bush's Brain, "American politics' most talented, prolific, and successful dissembler."Karl Rove's middle name is Christian, and his favorite constituency is Christian, the farther right the better. And yet, TV correspondent Moore and Dallas Morning News political writer Slater reveal, Rove "once told a colleague that he had no religious affiliation and was 'not a Christian.' " Still, perhaps mindful of Lenin's praise for "useful idiots," the cynical self-described genius recognized that in the Christian right-and in such underappreciated new phenomena as the mega-churches mushrooming across the land-lay the ground troops for his dream of one-party rule. The party, of course, would be the Republicans, who had once been dominant for half-a-century and could be made to be dominant even longer thanks to the charms of such Roverian dreamboats as Ronald Reagan and George Bush. Possessing a bookie's knowledge of stats and trends, Rove masterminded every aspect of Bush's 2000 and 2004 elections, good and bad, using whatever means necessary to divide the enemy, usurp their message, convince supporters that the enemy was an agent of satanic forces-whence such infamous wedge issues as gay marriage, which turn out to be meaningful to just enough of a conservative fringe to settle elections in many a district. It is illuminating to learn that Rove, quite apart from disdaining "the base," may have certain feelings about gay people because of personal history; it is still more illuminating to know that the GOP's leadership subscribes to the view of Rove's own mentor, Michael Ledeen, who, the authors report, once remarked that the president may beexcused if he should "enter into evil whenever the very existence of the nation is threatened." Thus Abramoff, and Iraq, and . . . An architect, indeed, in the Speerian sense-and that's no hyperbole. So the reader, sobered and astonished, might well conclude.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2007
Publisher
Crown Publishing Group
Pages
352
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780307237934

More by James Moore

Similar books