Change Your Life! |
It’s official: Republican ticket ‘Bush-Cheney’ |
News
|
|
July 26, 2000
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - After a three-month search headed by former Defense Secretary Dick Cheney, Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush found himself a running mate - ending where he started, with Cheney. The Texas governor planned to offer Cheney the job Tuesday, two highly placed Republican officials said Monday night. Cheney, 59, will accept it, associates said. The official announcement, tentatively planned for Tuesday, promised to be an anticlimatic ending to a top-secret search involving a score of prominent Republicans who had hoped to land a spot on Bush's ticket, only to be bested by the man who had an inside track from the start. Cheney brings the ticket a wealth of foreign policy experience and political stature - traits that Bush, a two-term Texas governor, lacks himself. He is a bridge between Bush and his father, former President George Bush, who put Cheney in his Cabinet and promoted him for his son's ticket. After promising an "electrifying" choice, Bush took the safe route: Cheney is a rock-solid conservative who poses little or no political risk. Bolder choices were available, including abortion-rights Govs. Tom Ridge of Pennsylvania and George Pataki of New York. Fashioning an impressive resume in two decades of public service, Cheney served as President Gerald Ford's chief of staff, six terms in Congress from Wyoming and four years as Pentagon chief, where he successfully executed the Gulf War. Cheney suffered three heart attacks by age 48, but a doctor commissioned by the Bush campaign issued a statement saying his health "should not interfere with a strenuous political campaign." Bush, 54, plucked the former Pentagon chief from the private sector to head up his selection process. Though rumored to be a candidate himself, Cheney's position atop Bush's short list didn't become public until Friday. Even before the deal was sealed, Republican officials welcomed the prospect of a Bush-Cheney ticket. Tennessee Sen. Bill Frist, a contender for the job until the end, called Cheney "a man with substance (with) serious broad experience in the public as well as private sector." Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, another contender, said Cheney "represents the quality, character and experience that America is searching for in national leadership." Vice President Al Gore, whose convention begins Aug. 14 in Los Angeles, is considering a number of candidates, including former Senate George Mitchell of Maine, Florida Sen. Bob Graham and Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry. Among the Republican stalwarts in addition to Hagel and Frist who had been under consideration: Gov. Frank Keating of Oklahoma, Ridge and Pataki; former Gov. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee; Sen. Fred Thompson of Tennessee; and Rep. John Kasich of Ohio. Former Missouri Sen. John Danforth lingered on the short list until the end but came up short despite the advantage of hailing from a battleground state. Cheney changed his voting registration from Texas to Wyoming last week to get around a constitutional problem when both halves of a presidential ticket live in the same state. All signs had pointed to Cheney for days. He told business associates he had a good chance of getting the job and leaving his company, Halliburton Co. of Dallas; and he forwarded an all-clear health report from his doctors to Bush. Cheney sold nearly half his interest in Halliburton stock - some 100,000 shares - last month, raising an estimated dlrs 5.1 million. Before the sale, Cheney held options on 229,000 shares in the oil services and construction conglomerate. The health report came at the behest of Bush and his father, both of whom wanted to know whether Cheney's history of heart trouble would pose a problem in the campaign. Sensitive to suggestions that the elder Bush is a quiet power behind his son's White House bid, campaign spokeswoman Karen Hughes said the call to Cheney's doctor was the only action taken by the former president in the review process. Cheney served as defense secretary under President Bush, helping the president forge an international coalition in the Gulf War. Before that, he served in Congress and as chief of staff for Ford. Bush has faced questions about whether he is ready to be president, and advisers believe a running mate who knows his way around the White House - and around the world - would fill in the so-called gravitas gap. In Congress, Cheney appealed to moderates, but racked up a conservative voting record and was a solid Ronald Reagan supporter. He was mentioned as a possible vice presidential running mate for Bush in 1992. He is anti-abortion but says the party must accommodate Republicans on both sides of the debate. Cheney suffered three mild heart attacks more than 10 years ago, including one while campaigning for the Wyoming House seat in the primaries. He has undergone coronary bypass surgery. |