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Republicans Rally Around Cheney as Rumors Swirl
Yahoooo via Reuters ^
| 2/25/04
Posted on 02/26/2004 8:05:56 AM PST by areafiftyone
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Bush (news - web sites) and other Republicans are rallying around Vice President Dick Cheney (news - web sites) as they seek to quash rumors that Bush might ultimately replace Cheney on his re-election ticket.
Some pundits believe that if Bush is struggling in the polls a few months from now as the 2004 campaign moves into high gear, he might boost his chances for re-election by picking a running mate other than Cheney.
Helping to spur an already active Washington rumor mill was the Feb. 14 cover story in the National Journal which depicted a stern-faced Cheney standing next Bush.
"Just the ticket?" queried the headline. "Does having Dick Cheney as his running mate help or hurt George W. Bush in 2004?"
The article mentioned potential successors to Cheney such as former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (news - web sites) and Bush national security adviser Condoleezza Rice (news - web sites).
At a Republican governors fund-raiser that marked the kickoff of his 2004 campaign, Bush gave a ringing endorsement of Cheney and in a joking way, alluded obliquely to rumors he might be mulling a change.
He quipped that he had put Cheney in charge of his vice presidential search committee, as he had originally done in the 2000 campaign.
"He tells me he's reviewed all the candidates, and he's come back with the same recommendation as last time," Bush said. "In fact, I made the choice myself, and I have taken the measure of this man. They don't come any better, and I am proud to have Dick Cheney by my side."
The National Journal article said there were "grumblings" among some Republicans who felt that removing Cheney from the ticket might be helpful to Bush because the vice president has been a key target of Democratic attacks for such issues as his past role as head of energy company Halliburton Co., the energy firm that contracts in post-war Iraq (news - web sites).
Cheney's negative ratings in public opinion polls regularly are the worst of anyone in the Bush administration.
DEMOCRATS MORE LIKELY TO BELIEVE RUMORS
There seem to be far more Democrats than Republicans, however, who buy into the rumors that Cheney might end up off of the Bush re-election ticket.
The scenario envisioned by some political analysts is that Cheney might bow out of the Bush-Cheney re-election race sometime before the Republican convention begins in late August.
The vice president, who has a history of heart trouble, could cite his health as a way to take himself out of the race without it appearing that he was pushed out, said Douglas Brinkley, a historian and author of a book at the front-runner for the Democratic nomination, Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry (news - web sites)..
"If there's a feeling that if Democrats have momentum (ahead of the Republican convention), a shake-up will be in order and Cheney will, due to health reasons, resign," Brinkley said.
While opposition to Cheney may help energize the Democratic base, the flip-side is that he also spurs the base of his own party.
"There is a better likelihood that I will be abducted by aliens than that Cheney will get dumped from the ticket," said one Republican official, who called Cheney "indispensable" to the Bush administration.
Cheney, considered by many historians to be one of the most influential vice presidents in modern times, has had crucial roles in everything from helping to shape and sell Bush's tax cuts to advocating action in advance of the Iraq war.
He is frequently the White House's key liaison to Capitol Hill when sensitive issues arise, such as a deadlock during the fall over Bush's proposals to overhaul energy policy and decisions over whether to appoint a commission to investigate flaws in prewar intelligence on Iraq regarding weapons of mass destruction.
"I don't think he's an impediment in any way to President Bush's re-election prospects," said Gary Bauer (news - web sites), head of American Values, a group that advocates conservative social positions
TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bushcheney2004; cheney; gwb2004; veep; vp
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To: areafiftyone
Naah ! Change his oil, rotate his tires and Cheney's good for another 100,000 miles.
To: areafiftyone
The only rumors that are swirling are the ones the media is starting, and the wishful thinking of the DemonRATS. The President already said that Dick and he are running in '04. What more do these people need?
3
posted on
02/26/2004 8:09:54 AM PST
by
mass55th
To: Eric in the Ozarks
But then where will we get our gravitas???
4
posted on
02/26/2004 8:10:12 AM PST
by
Huck
(OK. I'm over it.)
To: areafiftyone
BARF ARTICLE. This is nothing more than setting up Bush as a political monster if anything does happen to Cheney or if Cheney steps down.
5
posted on
02/26/2004 8:10:22 AM PST
by
Naspino
(HTTP://NASPINO.BLOGSPOT.COM)
To: areafiftyone
Bush needs to distance himself from the Halliburton Iraq mess - the greedy SOBs have only themselves to blame on that one and Cheney stinks to high heaven by being associated with them. Besides with Rice as VP he would win hands-down. Cheney's smug know-it-all arrogance is getting old IMHO.
6
posted on
02/26/2004 8:10:22 AM PST
by
afz400
To: Eric in the Ozarks
Sure sounds like the media wants Cheney gone. So many articles speculating his demise. Cheney must be getting to them.
7
posted on
02/26/2004 8:12:12 AM PST
by
drc43
To: areafiftyone
Short of serious health problems, there is absolutely no way Cheney will not be the VP. This talk is as dumb as talk about Hillary taking out Kerry in a plane accident, although there is little more merit in that possibility.
To: afz400
"Rice as VP he would win hands-down."Rice is untested. Seems to be kinda brittle too, IMHO.
9
posted on
02/26/2004 8:14:30 AM PST
by
billorites
(freepo ergo sum)
To: areafiftyone
It's in the media and right here on FR.I wonder if some suggesting Guilliani replace Cheney are really Republicans.I like Guilliani but he is not a good replacement as a VP.He is more likely to be a good candidate for NY Senator.
10
posted on
02/26/2004 8:14:39 AM PST
by
MEG33
(John Kerry's been AWOL for two decades on issues of National Security!)
To: mass55th
They hate that Cheney can bring in the campaign bucks, even while their guy doesn't have a running mate yet.
To: areafiftyone
Take it to the bank....Bush-Frist '04
To: areafiftyone
A good friend of mine, Sierra Club Lib, NPR junkie, but agrees with Bush on his foreign policey, would seriously consider voting for G.W., if D.C. wasn't on the ticket. He's bought into the whole Halliburton thing. I keep telling him, "Too much NPR".
To: afz400
Hang in there.... only 4 3/4 years to go and then someone else can have it.....
14
posted on
02/26/2004 8:16:34 AM PST
by
deport
( BUSH - CHENEY 2004 .....)
To: areafiftyone
Cheney needs to resign next spring not this spring. That way Bush can choose his successor in a non-election state of mind. If the GOP doesn't prepare a successor to Bush for 2008 we are setting ourselves up for a hard lesson.
15
posted on
02/26/2004 8:17:35 AM PST
by
azcap
To: afz400
Can you clarify what you mean by the "Halliburton Iraq mess"? Mr. Cheney, last I checked, has as much to do with Halliburton as Mr. Bush has to do with the Texas Rangers.
16
posted on
02/26/2004 8:17:53 AM PST
by
Mr. Bird
To: billorites
Rice is untested. Seems to be kinda brittle too, IMHO. Watch out, or you're going to get flamed by the "Condi! for President" fan club!
To: areafiftyone
I love Cheney. Too bad he's morally tone-deaf on homosexuality, but in every other way, he seems superb. He so flattened the much-vaunted Lieberman last go-around; he could flatten anyone the Dims pick.
Pro-abort Giuliani or fuzzy-but-suspicious-on-abortion Rice would split the party, and be about the stupidest thing Bush could do short of cheating on Laura or getting drunk with Maureen Dowd.
Dan
18
posted on
02/26/2004 8:19:42 AM PST
by
BibChr
("...behold, they have rejected the word of the LORD, so what wisdom is in them?" [Jer. 8:9])
To: areafiftyone
I already have a Bush-Cheney bumper sticker on my car, so I say he's on the ticket to stay.
To: areafiftyone
...blah blah blah...
I think I've been seeing stories (and Freeper posts) like this for the last four years. None of them have panned out. Wake me up when Big Time actually leaves.
20
posted on
02/26/2004 8:20:50 AM PST
by
RichInOC
("...and there's Adam Clymer, that major league (anus) from the New York Times." "Yeah, big time.")
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