hgc
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2002
- Messages
- 15,892
There's increasing buzz that VP Cheney is on the way out of his job. Here's an example from Craig Crawford of Congressional Quarterly on MSNBC... http://thinkprogress.org/2006/11/27/crawford-on-cheney/
First of all, despite the technical truth, he can be fired. Let me explain. Yes, he's elected directly, and can only be removed as VP by impeachment and conviction. But he's only elected for 2 things: to take over as president should Bush not be able to finish his term and to break ties in the Senate. All the rest of his role and responsibility in government is at Bush's discretion. So he could be totally stripped of all responsibility, and relegated to his constitutional defined role of doing next to nothing.
Next, who on Earth thinks that if Bush told Cheney to resign, he wouldn't actually do it? He can be fired.
Clues:
The week before the election, Bush was asked at a press conference if Rumsfeld was going to be let go. Bush answered that both Rummy and Cheney were there to stay. But he hadn't been asked about Cheney! The rest (in the case of Rummy) is history. Bush says you stay -- that means you're a goner. Heck of a job, Brownie.
Robert Novak, Cheney's CIA agent exposure tool, wrote a bazarre column a few days ago talking about how dejected and despondent Cheney is about how Rummy was unceremoniously dumped. Is he getting the word out to the faithful that his brother vampire longs to seek solace in his coffin with dirt from the neo-con homeland?
Iraq Study Group will urge engagement with Syria and Iran to attempt to pull our fat out of the Iraq fire. As a matter of fact, they've already started talking to Syria. This is a severe repudiation to Cheney's preferred stick-in-the-eye approach to dealing with those two countries. It seems like yesterday that Cheney was sabre rattling over Iran.
Cheney is the architect of the imperial presidency, wherein the Bush doesn't have to observe the law if he gets a notion (also called a "signing statment") that his interpretation is different from what the written law he just signed says -- not to mention other ways of breaking the law, i.e. NSA warrantless spying on American citizens. Now that Dems control Congress, Bush is going to have to reel it in a little or face the wrath of the revival of a previously moribund Congress.
Thoughts?
First of all, despite the technical truth, he can be fired. Let me explain. Yes, he's elected directly, and can only be removed as VP by impeachment and conviction. But he's only elected for 2 things: to take over as president should Bush not be able to finish his term and to break ties in the Senate. All the rest of his role and responsibility in government is at Bush's discretion. So he could be totally stripped of all responsibility, and relegated to his constitutional defined role of doing next to nothing.
Next, who on Earth thinks that if Bush told Cheney to resign, he wouldn't actually do it? He can be fired.
Clues:
The week before the election, Bush was asked at a press conference if Rumsfeld was going to be let go. Bush answered that both Rummy and Cheney were there to stay. But he hadn't been asked about Cheney! The rest (in the case of Rummy) is history. Bush says you stay -- that means you're a goner. Heck of a job, Brownie.
Robert Novak, Cheney's CIA agent exposure tool, wrote a bazarre column a few days ago talking about how dejected and despondent Cheney is about how Rummy was unceremoniously dumped. Is he getting the word out to the faithful that his brother vampire longs to seek solace in his coffin with dirt from the neo-con homeland?
Iraq Study Group will urge engagement with Syria and Iran to attempt to pull our fat out of the Iraq fire. As a matter of fact, they've already started talking to Syria. This is a severe repudiation to Cheney's preferred stick-in-the-eye approach to dealing with those two countries. It seems like yesterday that Cheney was sabre rattling over Iran.
Cheney is the architect of the imperial presidency, wherein the Bush doesn't have to observe the law if he gets a notion (also called a "signing statment") that his interpretation is different from what the written law he just signed says -- not to mention other ways of breaking the law, i.e. NSA warrantless spying on American citizens. Now that Dems control Congress, Bush is going to have to reel it in a little or face the wrath of the revival of a previously moribund Congress.
Thoughts?