Well, now we know what sausage-casing in glasses Karl Rove meant when he said this:
October 31, 2006
Presidential adviser Karl Rove, an architect of Republican political strategy, says he's confident his party will hold both chambers of Congress. He says that despite public polls that show Democrats have a strong chance of winning. Why is Rove publicly confident?
Regardless of the outcome of the 2006 election, why was Rove confident?
Perhaps he knew just how Washington works, more than four years later:
A long-running federal investigation has found that White House political aides to President George W. Bush engaged in widespread violations of a federal law which limits partisan political activity by government employees during the 2006 midterm elections.
A 118-page report issued Monday by the little-known Office of Special Counsel cites numerous violations of the Hatch Act by the Bush-era White House Office of Political Affairs. The report concludes that federal taxpayers footed the bill for improper activities that were intended to advance Republican political candidates.
It helped, as Rove knew, that the Bush-era head of the Office of Special Counsel was about as unqualified for his job as you'd expect.
And just like Iraq, GITMO, and a wide variety of authorized tortures, there will be no further prosecutions, I'm sure.
Thank goodness for consequences.
(pic from KeninNY at Down with Tyranny)
[cross-posted at Firedoglake]