Dick Cheney, the country’s oldest living
vice president, and an ultra-conservative icon of the pre-Trumpian GOP far-right,
this past week announced that he will be voting for liberal Democrat Kamala
Harris for president. His reason? He feels the other candidate, Donald Trump, simply
poses too grave a danger to democracy and the republic to vote for him.
Dick Cheney - Trump greatest threat in history |
Although Cheney has been an open critic of
Trump’s ever since the January Sixth Insurrection of 2021—as has his ticket-mate,
former President George W. Bush—until now, he has remained circumspect about
the stance of his daughter, former Wyoming Representative Liz Cheney, who has
made it clear that there was no way she would vote for her party’s presidential
ticket if Donald Trump was heading it. She too recently announced that she was
voting for Harris, despite her and Harris’s starkly juxtaposed policy
positions.
In the case of both father and daughter, and
despite both being dyed-in-the-wool conservatives, they posit that there are
times when patriotism requires placing nation above party. Both are the staunchest
of true Republicans. Although there had been speculation that Liz Cheney might
eventually join other never-Trump conservatives in forming a third party, this
never materialized and she has recently been uncharacteristically quiet, after
sacrificing her entire career to take on what she considered Trump’s treasonous
behavior when she was one of only two Republican members of the nine-person January
Sixth investigative committee.
Nor will she or her father act—as have
other anti-Trump Republicans such as former Representative Adam Kinzinger or former
Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan—as surrogates for the Harris campaign. They
remain party loyalists, but the kind of loyalists who consider the GOP to have
been hijacked by Trump, as a would-be dictator.
On announcing his decision to vote for
Harris, Dick Cheney said this past week, “In our nation’s two hundred
forty-eight-year history, there has never been an individual who is a greater
threat to our republic than Donald Trump,” adding that, “He can never be
trusted with power again.”
Cheney underscored his decision by saying,
“We have a duty to put country above partisanship to defend our Constitution.
That is why I will be casting my vote for Vice President Kamala Harris.”
Trump - delusional authoritarian candidate |
Cheney made his announcement against a
backdrop in which Trump’s own pronouncements are becoming ever more
authoritarian, dystopian and insane. For instance, while the Republican-Party-of-Trump
candidate continues to waffle on the question of abortion in an attempt to dupe
right-leaning independents into voting for him, he has nevertheless made it
clear he would support a national ban—an issue on which Harris, at least among
women, will likely take him to the cleaner’s. But that’s not the worst of it.
He keeps repeating the MAGA conspiracy theory that Democrats want to allow
abortion throughout the ninth month, or even that they will allow babies to be
murdered after they are born. This is a flat and feverish lie, of course, and
an utterly delusional idea. His backers in Vladimir Putin’s election-interference
squad have used typical Russian propaganda to try and convince the most gullible
among Trump’s supporters that these baby-killings are already, indeed, taking
place, but that “nobody talks about it”, which is utterly absurd. But that hasn’t
kept Trump from repeating Russian talking points.
Trump has also gone off the deep end with
conspiracy theories about what immigration will be like under Harris—despite the
fact that she supports increasing the Border Guards by fifteen hundred officers
and turning back undocumented migrants at the border, and having drawn
criticism from sectors of her own party by publicly warning unprocessed migrants
not to come. According to another delusional Trump theory, espoused during a
recent rally, “If I don’t win Colorado, it will be taken over by migrants and
the governor will be sent fleeing.” He went on to say, “If you think you have a
nice house, have a migrant enjoy your house, because a migrant will take it
over. A migrant will take it over. It will be Venezuela on steroids.”
But his latest conspiracy theory, which he
has repeated on the campaign trail, is even more certifiably insane. He is now
claiming that children (“childs”, as he called them) are being subjected to
gender-affirming surgeries at school (at school!!!) without their parents’
knowledge.
“Can you imagine,” Trump has said, “you're
a parent and your son leaves the house, and you say, Jimmy, I love you so much,
go have a good day at school, and your son comes back with a brutal operation.
Can you even imagine this? What the hell is wrong with our country?”
Speaking to the radical right-wing
advocacy group Moms for Liberty, Trump said, “But the transgender thing is
incredible. Think of it. Your kid goes to school and comes home a few days
later with an operation. The school decides what's going to happen with your
child. And you know, many of these childs [sic] fifteen years later say, 'What
the hell happened? Who did this to me?' They say, 'Who did this to me?' It's
incredible.”
And the madness doesn’t end there. Recently,
Trump told a rally of people who identify as “Christian conservatives” that he
needed for them to turn out and vote in this election, but adding, “I love you.
You gotta get out and vote. In four years, you don’t have to vote again. We’ll
have it fixed so good, you’re not going to have to vote.”
Even coming from Donald Trump this seemed
like a shockingly autocratic statement. So much so that the ever Trump-sympathetic
Murdoch empire’s infotainment network, Fox News, called him on it. In an
interview, one of Trump’s most slavish cheerleaders, Laura Ingraham, pointed
out that Democrats were citing the quote as evidence that Trump would end
elections if he returned to office. She called the Democrats’ claim “ridiculous”
and sought to get Trump to backtrack on his statement. But he didn’t.
“I
said, vote for me, you’re not going to have to do it ever again. It’s true,” Trump
reiterated. “Because we have to get the vote out. Christians are not known as a
big voting group. They don’t vote. And I’m explaining that to them. You never
vote. This time, vote. I’ll straighten out the country, you won’t have to vote
anymore. I won’t need your vote.”
Ingraham tried again saying, more specifically,
“It’s being interpreted, as you are not surprised to hear, by the left as,
well, they’re never going to have another election. So can you even just
respond…” But Trump cut her off and tried to change the subject, repeating
again his (false) claim that Christians vote in small numbers. When she persisted,
he repeated exactly what he had posited before, saying, “Don’t worry about the
future. You have to vote on November fifth. After that, you don’t have to worry
about voting anymore. I don’t care, because we’re going to fix it. The country
will be fixed and we won’t even need your vote anymore, because frankly we will
have such love, if you don’t want to vote anymore, that’s OK.”
It was a statement that those of us
accustomed to covering dictators throughout the Americas, both past and
present, have heard many times before. It’s part of the authoritarian playbook
to tell the governed that things will be so good for them under the authoritarian
government that nobody will ever even care again if there are elections or not—with
the elliptical end of that sentence being, because there won’t be.
Following former Vice President Dick
Cheney’s announcement that he was casting his vote for Harris, Trump responded
by referring to Cheney as an “irrelevant RINO” (Republican in Name Only).
Wait…Really??? An irrelevant RINO? Dick
Cheney?
Well, for anyone who doesn’t know him,
meet Richard Bruce Cheney:
Born in 1941, Dick Cheney, at
eighty-three, is the oldest living US vice president, having served as such for
eight years under the administration of George W. Bush. But that came after a
very long career as a key figure in the conservative far-right Republican camp.
So much so that even moderate Republicans considered him “too far right.” He
was, arguably, the most powerful VP in history, considered by some observers to
be more of a “shadow president” since he was often seen as calling the shots in
the Bush administration.
Cheney started his political career as an
intern for US Representative William Steiger, who served in Congress from 1967 until
his death in 1978. But already during the Nixon era (1969-1974), Cheney was
working in the West Wing. After Nixon’s resignation, Cheney became White House chief
of staff for Gerald Ford. He then served from 1979 to 1989 as US representative
for Wyoming. Before serving as vice president to George W. Bush, he was
appointed secretary of defense by Bush’s father, George H.W. Bush from 1989 to
1973, during which time he oversaw the US invasion of Panama (Operation Just Cause),
and the Gulf War (Operation Desert Storm).
Under the younger Bush, Cheney came into
his own as one of the Republican Party’s most powerful players. After 911, he
was instrumental in expanding the powers of the presidency, and in advocating
for exceptional intelligence-gathering methods in the War on Terror, of which
he was an architect. These included secret wiretaps, enhanced interrogation (torture),
waterboarding as standard practice, and removal of terrorist suspects from the
normal judicial system, suspending their civil rights. This allowed, as in
dictatorships, anyone dubbed a terrorist to be held, without formal charges, at
the disposal of the Executive Branch.
Cheney was also among the earliest
proponents of invading Iraq on what would, for the most part, turn out to be
false pretenses. As such, he was also a chief architect of the Iraq War, which
later expanded into the Middle East War, basically a US war of aggression on
the Middle East.
The extent of his power in government was
underscored by his public disagreement with Bush over same-sex marriage. Bush
originally endorsed civil unions between people of the same sex. Cheney openly
and publicly disagreed with him and backed amended legislation to ban same-sex
marriage. It is telling that Bush later the same year (2004) lent his support
to the ban. This was unlikely to have surprised Washington insiders, however,
since many of them reported that few if any administration decisions were made
without Cheney’s okay.
Liz and Dick Cheney, lone Republicans at J-6 observance |
So, in other words, what has led both Liz
Cheney and, now, her father, to write Trump off as what Liz calls an “unrecoverable
catastrophe” has little to do with government policy and everything to do with
Trump’s dictatorial designs. Both Cheneys have been done with him since January
Sixth, 2021. That was the deal-breaker, as was his refusal to concede defeat
and maintain the two-and-a-half-century democratic tradition of the peaceful
transfer of power.
That is to say, no matter how far to the right
father and daughter might be, they are, nevertheless, patriots, who believe in representative
democracy, and in their oaths to defend the Constitution and the Nation against
all enemies both foreign and domestic. And they see Trump in the same way I and
many other small-d democrats do, as a clear and present danger to democracy and
to the survival of the Nation. Or, as Liz Cheney succinctly put it in a recent
interview, "We see it on a daily basis, somebody (Trump) who was willing
to use violence in order to attempt to seize power, to stay in power, someone
who represents unrecoverable catastrophe, frankly, in my view, and we have to
do everything possible to ensure that he's not reelected."
All I can say is, “Amen.”
2 comments:
Amen, too!
Well said! Well presented!
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