Robert Novak

Robert David Novak (born February 26, 1931) is a U.S. conservative columnist ("Inside Report", since 1963; until 1993 co-written with Rowland Evans) who is also well known as a television personality, appearing on programs like CNN's Capital Gang or Crossfire or NBC's Meet the Press, and is referred to by Washington insiders as "The Prince of Darkness". Born in Joliet, Illinois, he attended the University of Illinois from 1948 to 1952 and earned a bachelors of arts degree. He wrote for the Joliet Herald-News and The Champaign-Urbana Courier while in college. After serving in the Korean War as a lieutenant in the U.S. Army, he joined the Associated Press and covered politics in Indianapolis. In 1957, he covered Congress for the AP in Washington, D.C. until he joined the D.C. bureau of The Wall Street Journal in 1958 to cover the Senate, eventually becoming the chief congressional correspondent in 1961. Novak has strong conservative views, yet does not strongly identify with the current direction of the Republican Party. Like Pat Buchanan, he is ideologically similar to what many call a paleoconservative. Born Jewish, Novak lost his faith in college but converted to Catholicism in 1998. He is a member of the Catholic organisation Opus Dei. In 1966, he teamed up with Rowland Evans to create the Evans-Novak Political Report until Evans' death in 2001. Critics often derided their work together as "Errors and No Facts". His column is syndicated by the Chicago Sun-Times. In 2003, he disclosed the identity of CIA analyst Valerie Plame in his newspaper column after receiving a leak from a member of the Bush administration. The leak is currently being investigated, but at the present time, the nature of the leak itself is in question. The operative status of Plame, her function, and her involvement in her husband's trip to Africa all factor in to the issue. Many observers complained that Novak was inconsistent as he refused to reveal the source of the Plame leak, although he later called on CBS to reveal the source of the memos alleging President Bush had evaded National Guard service (see Rathergate). Novak had also previously violated the principle of protecting sources by revealing Robert Hanssen as the confidential source for some of his articles. Ironically, Novak indicated at the time that he felt justified in doing so because Hansen was a traitor - he had been found guilty of revealing the identities of undercover CIA operatives. In March 2004, he insinuated on CNN's Crossfire that Richard Clarke had revealed government mistakes in his book dealing with the war against terrorism because he resented Condoleezza Rice's position as a black woman on the cabinet. Jon Stewart of The Daily Show responded by pointing out Novak's previous statements and, after telling of Novak's assertion that Senator John Kerry should be assumed guilty until proven innocent of the accusations made by the Swift Boat Veterans For Truth (now the Swift Vets and POWs for Truth), labelled Novak "a Douchebag of Liberty." Stewart has taken to repeating the phrase every time Novak says or does anything Stewart considers foolish or hypocritical. In August 2004, after other journalists had reported on it, Novak admitted that his son, Alex Novak, is the Director of Marketing for the Swift Boat Veteran's publisher, Regnery Publishing. At the time he said that he didn't "think it relevant." Two months later Salon.com reported that Regnery's owner is also the publisher of Novak's own US$297-newsletter and that Novak is on the board of a foundation whose chief holdings are the stock of Regnery's parent company.http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2004/10/01/novak/print.html

Books

  • Agony of the GOP, 1964
  • Lyndon B. Johnson: The Exercise of Power
  • Nixon in the White House: The Frustration of Power
  • The Reagan Revolution

External links

Novak, Robert Novak, Robert Novak, Robert

 

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