Karl Rove's pre-election exchange with NPR's Robert Siegel is hilarious:
SIEGEL: We're in the home stretch, though, and many would consider you on the optimistic end of realism about -
ROVE: Not that you would be exhibiting a bias ...
SIEGEL: I'm looking at all the same polls that you're looking at every day.
ROVE: No, you're not. No, you're not.
SIEGEL: No, I'm not.
ROVE: No, you're not. You're not. I'm looking at 68 polls a week. You may be looking at four or five public polls a week that talk about attitudes nationally but that do not impact the outcome of -
SIEGEL: I'm looking at main races between - certainly Senate races.
ROVE: Well, like the poll today showing that Corker's ahead in Tennessee, or the poll showing that Allen is pulling away in the Virginia Senate race.
SIEGEL: Leading Webb in Virginia, yeah.
ROVE: Exactly.
SIEGEL: But you've seen the DeWine race and the Santorum race - I don't want to have you call races.
ROVE: Yeah, I'm looking at all these, Robert, and adding them up, and I add up to a Republican Senate and Republican House. You may end up with a different math, but you're entitled to your math, I'm entitled to THE math.
SIEGEL: Well, I don't know if we're entitled to our different math, but you're certainly -
ROVE: I said THE math. I said you're entitled to yours.
Maybe Rove thought the White House could could create its own reality in which "THE math" showed a Republican win.
PS I thought conservatives opposed the new math!
Perhaps the shine is starting to come off of the "GENIUS" apple?
Posted by: Raleighite | November 13, 2006 at 02:58 PM
It wasn't the NEW Math to which the Administration objected, it was "fuzzy math."
Rove's math wasn't fuzzy. It was clear as a bell--clearly WRONG!
Posted by: Bunker | November 13, 2006 at 11:28 PM