Rove, wife,
divorce after 24-year marriage
Spokeswoman: Former Bush
adviser's split decided 'mutually and amicably'
Carlos Osorio / AP
Karl Rove, the
Republican strategist who served as a top aide to former president
George
W.
Bush, and his
wife of 24 years have divorced.
A spokeswoman said
Tuesday that Rove and his wife, Darby, were granted a divorce last
week.
The couple
"came to the decision mutually and amicably and they maintain a
close
relationship and a
strong friendship," said family spokeswoman Dana Perino in a
statement. "There will be no further comment and the family
requests that its privacy be respected."
News of the split
was first reported by POLITICO.
Known as the Bush
administration's "architect" during his tenure as the
Republican president's senior adviser and deputy chief of staff,
Rove cited his commitment to his family as a major reason for his
resignation from the post in August 2007.
Rove, who steered
Bush to victory in two gubernatorial elections and two presidential
races, came under intense scrutiny in Congress over his role in the
decision to fire a number of
U.S. attorneys. He
also faced investigation in the White House leak controversy that led
to the conviction of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, a top aide
to Vice
President Dick Cheney.
He married Darby
Hickson, his second wife, in 1986. His wife, a graphic artist, is a
breast cancer survivor. They have one son, Andrew.
Rove's memoir,
"Courage and Consequence," is slated for release in March
2010.