A Winning Strategy for Bush: DUMP CHENEY

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
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What do you think?

Dump Cheney
A winning strategy for Bush.
By Timothy Noah
Posted Tuesday, April 20, 2004, at 4:17 PM PT

Early this year, a rumor spread that President Bush was going to drop Dick Cheney from the 2004 ticket. This turned out to be wishful thinking by liberals and by the sort of moderate Republican internationalists who ran foreign policy during the presidency of George H.W. Bush. By the end of February, Robert Novak reported that "[n]ormally closed-mouthed political operatives" on Bush's re-election campaign were stating "unequivocally" that Cheney would remain. A story by Stewart M. Powell in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer quoted experts explaining that even if it wanted to, the Bush White House couldn't drop Cheney, because that would display weakness.

This is nonsense. As Powell's story noted, in the five previous instances where vice presidents failed to make it onto the re-election ticket, the incumbent president won the election on three occasions (Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, and Roosevelt again) and lost on two (Benjamin Harrison and Gerald Ford). The only tangible threat posed by dumping a vice president is that it may create a presidential candidate bent on revenge or vindication. But it's extremely unlikely that Dick Cheney, who is 63 and suffers from heart disease, would ever try. Dumping Dick Cheney would actually be a very smart move.

Before proceeding, Chatterbox should declare his bias, which is against a second Bush term. Loyal Republicans will therefore suspect the argument contained herein is an attempt at sabotage. Not so. As a loyal Democrat, Chatterbox fervently hopes Karl Rove will ignore Chatterbox's advice. But as a political analyst, Chatterbox thinks Rove would be a fool not to recognize that Bush would benefit from throwing Cheney overboard.

The most obvious reason for Bush to dump Cheney is that it would help him with swing voters. Cheney is a polarizing figure. More than anyone else in the Bush administration, it is Cheney (and his aides) who acted like hot dogs in the run-up to Gulf War II. It was Cheney who insisted, based on "stovepiped" raw intelligence, that Saddam was on the verge of building nuclear weapons. It was Cheney who opposed more firmly than anyone else all attempts to bring the United Nations on board. It was Cheney who insisted, more loudly than anyone else, that Iraq was linked to 9/11 and urged Powell to present unpersuasive evidence on this point to the United Nations. It was Cheney who, as Chatterbox demonstrated yesterday, usurped the president and made the final decision to go to war. It is officials working in Cheney's office who reportedly are the likeliest White House aides to be indicted for leaking, for political purposes, the identity of CIA employee Valerie Plame. (On another front, it's also Cheney who told Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill that we learned from the Reagan administration that deficits don't matter.)

Swing voters aren't the only ones who are dissatisfied with the current chaos in Iraq. "The base" is upset, too. Nobody supported the Iraq war more ardently than the group of intellectuals known as neoconservatives, and the neocons have lately been complaining about the Bush administration's conduct of that war. In an April 17 New York Times column, neocon David Brooks declared himself "a more humble hawk" and observed, "[O]ver the past two years many conservatives have grown increasingly exasperated with the administration's inability to execute its policies semicompetently." Brooks is especially exercised about two failures: The failure to provide adequate military personnel to maintain order in Iraq, which is chiefly the fault of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and the failure to internationalize the effort to rebuild Iraq, which is chiefly Cheney's fault. Now, of course, the Bush administration is finally willing to create a larger role for the United Nations, but only because the situation has become desperate. (Even the Coalition Provisional Authority?the United States agency overseeing Iraq?says so.) It's lemon multilateralism.

Neocons Robert Kagan and William Kristol make the "too few troops" argument in the April 26 Weekly Standard and call on Rumsfeld to resign. Good idea. But dumping Cheney is a better one, for three reasons:

1) Deniability. If Rumsfeld were to get canned before Election Day, it would be impossible for Bush to deny plausibly that he was admitting the Iraq war was planned poorly. There's simply no other reason for Rumsfeld to go. Cheney, however, has that heart condition. Many people worried that Cheney might die during Bush's first term (during one hospitalization, Chatterbox rather tastelessly considered whether Rumsfeld might replace Cheney as Shadow President), and it would be easy for Cheney to claim he was stepping down because the stress had become too much.

2) Cheney is scarier. Rumsfeld can frequently play the bull in a china shop, but Cheney's out-of-controlness is more alarming. That's because Cheney didn't used to be this way. Nicholas Lemann once aptly compared Cheney's calming effect as resembling that of "a powerful timed dosage of serotonin re-uptake inhibitors." Cheney doesn't have that effect on people anymore. Chatterbox's working hypothesis is that Cheney, who has always been extremely conservative, but has spent most of his career tending to the agendas and egos of more moderate bosses?President Gerald Ford, House Minority Leader Robert Michel, President George H.W. Bush?got sick of repressing his true instincts. In some ways, Cheney calls to mind Raymond Peepgas, the meek banker in Tom Wolfe's A Man in Full who one day decides, against his better judgment, to liberate

A certain red dog. ... That was the way he suddenly thought of it; as a red dog you had to be willing to let off the leash. ... He could see that wild red dog. ... It had a chain around its neck, but the chain was broken. ... It was a red bull terrier with its forehead in a dreadful frown and its lower incisors bared and thrust forward. ... Every man had that red dog inside him, but only real men dared let him loose.

In Iraq, Cheney lost control. In Plan of Attack, Bob Woodward (channeling Colin Powell) describes Cheney as being in a "fever." He unleashed his wild red dog. Take that thing away!

3) The puppet-master problem. For four years, the public has speculated about the extent to which Bush is Charlie MacArthur to Cheney's Edgar Bergen. In his most recent press conference, Bush was twice subjected to the humiliation of being asked why, in his appearance before the 9/11 commission, Bush insisted that he bring Cheney along. He couldn't come up with an answer that even remotely addressed the question. Dumping Cheney would help dispel this extremely harmful perception.

Of course, if Cheney really is Bush's puppet master, all talk of dumping Cheney is a waste of time. But that's a topic for another day.
 

Zephyr106

Banned
Jul 2, 2003
1,309
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Get with the program. Cheney is good for the administration, he has special knowledge of gooey black important stuff. That arch-liberal Colin Powell, nearly traitorous in his comments to a noted author, is the one who will be dumped.

Zephyr
 

GoPackGo

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 2003
6,521
598
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Originally posted by: Zephyr106
Get with the program. Cheney is good for the administration, he has special knowledge of gooey black important stuff. That arch-liberal Colin Powell, nearly traitorous in his comments to a noted author, is the one who will be dumped.



Zephyr

If Cheney leaves the ballot then it should be McCain.

Then McCain for Prez in 2008
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
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I'd vote for McCain in 2008, but I'll vote against Bush if McCain runs as VP. Won't happen though. Saw him on Charlie Rose yesterday, he looked pretty happy with his current position.
 

fjord

Senior member
Feb 18, 2004
667
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Of course, if Cheney really is Bush's puppet master, all talk of dumping Cheney is a waste of time...

If ?
Sheesh.
 

Infohawk

Lifer
Jan 12, 2002
17,844
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I don't dumping think Cheney will help the neo-conservatives. Those of us who dislike Cheney are voting against Bush /anyway/ regardless of who he has as vice-president. Amongst independents and Republicans, I believe they only see George. His vice-president is immaterial. (And, unfortunately, they see him as someone who is honest and who can take charge when necessary.) On the other hand, if he chose a minority, it might help him get some of their votes.
 

dahunan

Lifer
Jan 10, 2002
18,191
3
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A winning strategy for Bush - go back to being an alcoholic and clip the puppet strings from your suit on your way out.
 

Ferocious

Diamond Member
Feb 16, 2000
4,584
2
71
Bush will be re-elected this fall.

But Cheney has no chance of succeeding him in 2008.

I would think most Democrats would love to see Cheney keep his post.

EDIT: What's up with this new forum design?? Not sure I like it....yet.
 

chess9

Elite member
Apr 15, 2000
7,748
0
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A winning strategy for Cheney: DUMP BUSH!

At least we'd have a President with a brain. A venal brain, but a brain nonetheless.

-Robert
 

Jhhnn

IN MEMORIAM
Nov 11, 1999
62,365
14,686
136
Yeh, right- it'd be like Charley McCarthy without Edgar Bergen- Cheney's fingers make Bush's lips move....
 

smashp

Platinum Member
Aug 30, 2003
2,443
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HELL just DUMP someone.

who has Been fired for anything in this admin.

Think of all the Botches and screwups and Not 1 head has rolled.

The Cia is in shambles and will take 5 years to get "Up to par" yet it is still led by the man who oversaw the Decline, and has been blamed for the 2 of the largest intelligence Failures in the history of this country.


FIRE HIM. FIRE SOMEONE