February 11, 2009 9:24 PM
- Text
Rove Under Fire
(CBS)
The White House Thursday rallied to the defense of a key presidential advisor linked to a controversial discussion about exempting the Salvation Army from laws banning discrimination against gays during hiring.
News earlier this week that the charity believed it had a solid commitment for such a regulation caused a furor, and the White House quickly ended a review of the possible regulation, saying no decision had been made.
On Wednesday, the White House blamed a mid-level staff member for leading the Salvation Army to believe the Bush administration had definitely signed on.
But the Washington Post reported in Thursday's editions that Karl Rove, the president's top political adviser, was a key contact for the Salvation Army.
"Rove was intimately involved in courting the Salvation Army," an official told the paper. The Post quoted the official as saying "nothing occurs around here" without Rove's blessing.
The story disputed comments earlier this week from Dan Bartlett, a deputy assistant to the president, who described Rove's involvement as cursory.
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer called the Post story absurd, saying Rove simply asked the budget office to review the possible change in regulations. Fleischer said requests for policy assistance come to the White House 10 times a day.
"Welcome to America people contacting their representatives in the White House to state their claims," Fleischer said.
Some state and local laws bar discrimination in hiring gays and lesbians. Others require employers to offer health insurance and other benefits to the domestic partners of gay employees. Typically, these laws do not apply to religious groups. But it's not clear whether groups lose that exemption once they accept taxpayer dollars.
The faith-based initiative legislation now pending in Congress and being pushed hard by Mr. Bush makes it clear that any religious group that gets government money may consider religion in making hiring decisions. The Salvation Army was asking for an additional change in regulations, called an OMB circular.
News earlier this week that the charity believed it had a solid commitment for such a regulation caused a furor, and the White House quickly ended a review of the possible regulation, saying no decision had been made.
On Wednesday, the White House blamed a mid-level staff member for leading the Salvation Army to believe the Bush administration had definitely signed on.
But the Washington Post reported in Thursday's editions that Karl Rove, the president's top political adviser, was a key contact for the Salvation Army.
"Rove was intimately involved in courting the Salvation Army," an official told the paper. The Post quoted the official as saying "nothing occurs around here" without Rove's blessing.
The story disputed comments earlier this week from Dan Bartlett, a deputy assistant to the president, who described Rove's involvement as cursory.
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer called the Post story absurd, saying Rove simply asked the budget office to review the possible change in regulations. Fleischer said requests for policy assistance come to the White House 10 times a day.
"Welcome to America people contacting their representatives in the White House to state their claims," Fleischer said.
Some state and local laws bar discrimination in hiring gays and lesbians. Others require employers to offer health insurance and other benefits to the domestic partners of gay employees. Typically, these laws do not apply to religious groups. But it's not clear whether groups lose that exemption once they accept taxpayer dollars.
The faith-based initiative legislation now pending in Congress and being pushed hard by Mr. Bush makes it clear that any religious group that gets government money may consider religion in making hiring decisions. The Salvation Army was asking for an additional change in regulations, called an OMB circular.
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