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Karl Christian Rove is an American political consultant and policy advisor. He was Senior Advisor and Deputy Chief of Staff during the George W. Bush administration until Rove's resignation on August 31, 2007.

He was born on December 25, 1950 (age 61), Denver He was a member of Republican Party.He Graduated at University of Texas at Austin, University of Utah, Olympus High School,and More.

According to Karl Christian Rove before the presidential election.He was predicted this, Without twelve toss up states (MN, NV, CO, IA, WI, MI, OH, PA, NH, VA, NC, AND FL), Mitt Romney and Barack Obama are tied at 191 each.

I predict Mr. Romney will win FL (29), NC (15), VA (13), NH (4), OH (18), IA (6), CO (9) and Mr. Obama will get MN (10), NV (6), WI (10), MI (16), PA (20). This brings Mr. Romney to 285 Electoral College votes and Mr. Obama to 253.

 These are just my base predictions and I still think several of these states are too close to call. For example, while I put them in Mr. Obama's column, I still believe NV, WI, and PA are in play and very winnable for Mr. Romney.

 If crowds at his recent stops in these states are any indication of his supporters' enthusiasm, Mr. Romney will likely be able to claim victory in these states as well. But Fox News Channel heard a dissenting voice when it called pivotal battleground state Ohio — and the election — for President Barack Obama: its own contributor, Karl Rove.

 A distressed-looking Rove protested on the air Tuesday night to FNC anchors Bret Baier and Megyn Kelly that the call for Ohio was premature because fewer than 1,000 votes separated Obama and Republican Mitt Romney, with about a quarter of the vote yet to be counted.

 Kelly left the anchor desk and strode through FNC's corridors to a conference room that held what she termed the "Fox Decision Desk," which was making the channel's election calls.

Kelly was assured by those heading the desk that they stood by their math and the call. Rove took the news calmly, but pointed out that he was particularly sensitive to the issue because of the disputed Florida outcome in the 2000 Bush-Gore race.

 After a tense and bitter campaign, President Obama rolled to reelection Tuesday night, winning a new chance to repair the nation’s economy and fulfill the promises of hope and change he made four years ago. The networks called the race shortly after 11:10 p.m., as a series of swing states fell in rapid succession to give Obama the 270 electoral votes he needed to defeat Republican challenger Mitt Romney.




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