The Cheney "Endorsement" - Cheney's Last Laugh?

by: Daniel De Groot

Sun Nov 02, 2008 at 22:18


As suspicious as I am of the motives of the conservatives jumping ship to support Obama (like Powell and Buckley), I am equally suspicious of the Cheney endorsement.  Much like Osama Bin Laden's 2004 "endorsement" of John Kerry, Cheney simply has to know how his endorsement would play.  So why do it?  All I can come up with is simple revenge.  Inside, I'll present the evidence.
Daniel De Groot :: The Cheney "Endorsement" - Cheney's Last Laugh?
First off, to cover the obvious, Cheney is grotesquely unpopular and has been for quite some time.  Yes, I know Cheney's remarks were delivered in Wyoming, where people might still brake if they saw him crossing the street, but I don't think Wyoming's 3 electoral-votes were high on McCain's list of worries.

As for the Wyoming House seat that is in play, recent polling has Trauner 4-6 points down to the Republican.  Even so, let's look at what Cheney actually said:


I'm delighted to support John McCain, and I'm pleased that he has chosen a running mate with executive talent, toughness, and common sense: our next Vice President, Governor Sarah Palin. (Applause.)

As Obama has quite ably been exploiting, when is Cheney ever delighted about anything?  I doubt he has ever felt an emotion more positive than "smugness."  Snark aside, this language is suggestive of Cheney deliberately trying to draw attention to this remark, so it wouldn't be missed.  After all, much earlier in the speech, Cheney had said:


[...] but I do want to join my daughter Liz, who's with me today, and join us in casting your ballots for John McCain and Sarah Palin. (Applause). Our country cannot afford the high-tax liberalism of Barack Obama and Joe Biden. (Applause.)

That would have passed without notice, and was all anyone would expect him to say at a rally to support a threatened House candidate.  

So how did McCain's camp respond?  Here's their reaction/counterpoint when Obama started ribbing them over it:


The McCain campaign wasn't amused by the Cheney hoopla. "Barack Obama and Dick Cheney aren't just cousins, they've shared support for the Bush energy policy and the out-of-control spending that John McCain has fought to oppose," spokesman Tucker Bounds e-mailed reporters. (The e-mail included a handy fact sheet, citing an Obama speech in Iowa in January as the source to note Obama and Cheney's distant family ties.) Apparently the idea was to persuade voters that Cheney and Obama have more in common than Cheney and McCain. Chances are that one will fly about as well as the caged game birds Cheney likes to shoot.

I think the panicked flailing response tells you this wasn't something they were prepared for.

If Revenge, Revenge For What?

The most obvious/likely candidate is McCain's torture amendment from 2005, which generated headlines like this one from Dan Froomkin:  McCain Defeats Cheney


President Bush's cave-in yesterday on Sen. John McCain's torture ban was embarrassing for him -- but it was a total debacle for Vice President Cheney.

Cheney had publicly taken the lead in trying to scuttle McCain's proposal. When that proved both unseemly and ineffective, Cheney was equally publicly pulled off the case.

While it's true Bush would win this fight via signing statement, there is little doubt the political fight with his own party's Senators seriously ruffled some feathers.  Cheney in particular would not like being shown up like that, only able to keep 9 Republican senators on-side. As Froomkin further notes:


Cheney was conspicuously absent when Bush invited McCain to the Oval Office yesterday and announced his decision to embrace legislation that was in almost every way identical to what he had promised to veto five months ago.

Suffice to say Cheney wasn't happy.  

Beyond that, both McCain and Cheney have long histories in government, and may have butted heads on any number of issues.  Cheney's utter exclusion from the RNC probably didn't help.

I wonder if the paragraph preceding his endorsement was a veiled message from Dick to John:


In these decisive years, we've seen above all, the importance that leadership can make by making a decision and setting a course, and putting the interests of the nation ahead of any partisan agenda or personal advantage. Our nation has been fortunate to have that kind of leadership when we've needed it most. And in three days, we'll choose a new steward for the Presidency, and begin a new chapter in our history. It's the biggest decision that we make together as Americans, a lot turns on the outcome. I believe the right leader for this moment in history is Senator John McCain. (Applause.)

Which could be read as "John, even though you tried to embarrass us over doing what was necessary to defend America in your selfish grandstanding way, luckily we won out and the Office of the President is not diminished so the next worthy Republican will have a free hand to interrogate prisoners."  Admittedly I am merely guessing here.

Whatever the reason, for once we are evidently the beneficiaries of Cheney's boundless social dominance.  For one thing, it helps Obama, and for the other, it it a pretty ringing endorsement of Chris' belief that the election is already over.  McCain was already going down in flames, so Cheney decided to get a parting shot in.  


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Maybe... (0.00 / 0)
... or maybe Occam's Razor applies and Cheney is doing as Cheney does, ie, supporting the Republican.


occam (4.00 / 2)
Requires that the explanation be the simplest one.

Is it really the simplest explanation that Cheney, knowing he is universally loathed, picked Nov 1st to make his glowing endorsement, and didn't think to mention it to the McCain campaign?

If he just wanted to endorse, he could have done it back when Bush did, and get it out of the way.  



[ Parent ]
The king has no clothes (0.00 / 0)
I think we ascribe too many sinister motives to these people.  Cheney's actions may be evil, but he's not an evil mastermind.  Karl Rove is may be Bush's Brain, but he's not infallibly brainy.  Let's not give these people more credit than they deserve...

[ Parent ]
common sense (0.00 / 0)
You don't have to be an "evil mastermind" to understand that a really unpopular person endorsing a candidate doesn't help said candidate.

[ Parent ]
Do you think that Dick Cheney believes (0.00 / 0)
that his endorsement will hurt McCain?  He may be too egotistical to believe, despite any evidence to the contrary, that his endorsement could possibly bring anything but accolades for McCain/Palin 2008.


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
i do think that (0.00 / 0)
he's not dumb and he knows that the whitehouse stamp of approval is a death certificate.

[ Parent ]
So, he'd rather have Obama as President? (0.00 / 0)
Hard for me to accept.


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
it's possible (0.00 / 0)
he is pretty smart and a capitalist to the core, no?

[ Parent ]
maybe you are right (0.00 / 0)
in the sense that he just doesn't care who sits in the WH, he'll still have connections and can "refill the coffers" from the boardroom instead. Depending upon which arms trader corp built his undisclosed bunker, he may not even have to clean out his desk, just change the locks.

He accomplished his mission. The Executive is more unitary than ever, and even Parah Salin thinks the VP office may not be completely Executive. By that logic, maybe VP Biden can keep his Senate committee appointments, huh?

I guess its not so hard to accept, after all.


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
yup (0.00 / 0)
i think he's a heartless machiavellian pseudohuman machine.

:)


[ Parent ]
High Level Chaos Magickian (0.00 / 0)
The Queen of Black Hearts

(or so I once heard tell of such on a public access TV show broadcast from the Bunker Complex of the Art Temple Mandala)


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
whoa (0.00 / 0)
i didn't understand anything you said.

:)

happy obama!!!

(btw, i almost voted art temple today :)


[ Parent ]
Is the punchline of a convoluted and satirical joke (0.00 / 0)
I'm not even certain that I understand it.

I voted "Art Temple" 38 times this morning.  Apparently this is a watershed election for incombent,unopposed, judgeships, those races covered the entire backside (appropos, no?) of the ballot.

I have feeling we are gonna see a landslide today.  There's something in the air, and its not ominous.

They've upped their turn-out predictions in MN, we may be looking at over 90% in precincts that are usually down near 50%.  Overall Ritchie (Sec. of State) is predicting near 85% of eligible voters today.  

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
now that's a fleetwood mac song i can believe in :) (0.00 / 0)


[ Parent ]
he's not an evil mastermind? (0.00 / 0)
knowing he couldn't be elected,  he got himself to the head of the vetting committee for vice president and then vetted himself into the vice presidency and then turned it inot an enormously powerful position, just below a person with no strong beliefs as president.

cheney is rovesque, but you hear less about him because he's even less democratic.  rove only steals elections - cheney steals democracy.

but yes, he's not infallible - he's just shrewd and a Dick.  And I have no doubt that he was being a shrewed Dick  here as well - but the question is whether it's future oriented (control the republican party - maybe he wants to be palin's vp a nd continue running the ship) or whether it's just vindictive as other people have called him.


[ Parent ]
I think he lacks the self-reflection needed for him to conclude (0.00 / 0)
that his endorsement could do anything but enhance McCain's chances to get elected.


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
he knows he's unpopular (0.00 / 0)
WaPo:


King asks: "Do you ever, as an intelligent person, look in the mirror and say, maybe I'm wrong?"

Cheney responds: "No."

Is he upset that he's held in such low esteem by the public? "If I were in business to be popular, I suppose I'd be worried about my poll ratings and so forth. I'm not."



[ Parent ]
The way I read it (0.00 / 0)
this supports my previous comment.

Cheney believes that despite his unpopularity, his is the correct path. This is the essence of McCain's "maverick" theme, as well: do what is RIGHT, not what is POPULAR.

Thus, an endorsement of McCain by Cheney is a positive because it underscores the theme of his campaign. Cheney doesn't worry about the polls, so he can't see how his unpopularity can negatively impact Senator McCain.


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
i dunno (0.00 / 0)
i kind of think he's evil and he knows it.

[ Parent ]
That may be true (4.00 / 1)
but it does not follow that he would consider his endorsement to be a curse for McCain.

I have feeling we are not going to agree on this one:)

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
So you're saying his delusions don't extend to (4.00 / 1)
believing himself to be an asset to a Republican bid for president?  To make that the result of Occam's razor, you first have to use it to excise this man's monster ego.  I doubt he sees himself as anything like what he is:  pure evil.  I can't pretend to see into this man's motivations, but I think that the simplest explanation is that Cheney is, as dune2 says, just being Cheney.  If only we could figure out how to make him stop.

[ Parent ]
you can make him stop by arresting him or otherwise making him unpalatable, the way henry kissinger should be (0.00 / 0)
he needs to be the focus of a campaign for his activities at halliburton, his activites in the white house, and all else - at some point, i want some accountability and he's a person i would put at the top of my list.  it's not for symbolic reasons or out of anger alone - it's because an accountability campaign is something a progressive will do but a partisan democrat would let slide because of differing intentions and aims.

[ Parent ]
Are you offering to make a Citizen's Arrest? (0.00 / 0)
or just calling up the AG and asking him to bring charges?

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
public campaign for arrest targeting the attorney general (4.00 / 1)
or whoever else makes the most sense (ICC?).  You could also target congress and demand congressional hearings.  The idea,  after all, is not that Dick  Cheney is going to end up in jail - but that his actions and other behaviors both in and outside of office will be placed under intense scrutiny and to shift the public perception of what constitutes acceptable behavior from American politicians and officeholdrs and CEOs.  Other tactics include writing letters to the editor, protesting television shows that give him an appearance the way that Letterman does with Kissinger, writing articles and blogposts against him that highlight this stuff, protesting publishing houses that give him the chance to write a memoir.

Social movement strategies in other words :)  Just throwing out ideas - I'm sure others could brainstorm better ones.  I've never really done anything like this before.


[ Parent ]
All that would be nice (0.00 / 0)
but I'd kinda like to see him in an orange jumpsuit and leg irons. One picture is worth a 1,000 words.


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
agreed (4.00 / 2)
This is Cheney putting the knife in. I don't know why exactly (your reasons are as good as any), but there's no way he doesn't know that his endorsement hurts McCain. Has Obama made this into a TV commercial yet?

I'll be glad when Cheney and his suspiciously timed sympathy heart irregularities (4.00 / 1)
completely dissappear from the American landscape

First (4.00 / 1)
We have to pry him out of his undisclosed location before inauguaration day and get the launch codes from him.  

[ Parent ]
Nah, as was suggested before... (4.00 / 1)
Don't pry him out, just lock him in.  Seal the door with silver and cold iron and stamp it with the Elder Sign for good measure.

"A fantasy is not even a wish, much less an act.  There is no such thing as a culpable or shameful fantasy."  -----Lady Sally McGee

[ Parent ]





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