Vice President Dick Cheney, long portrayed by his aides as unperturbed by partisan attacks, admitted Friday that he "probably" cursed at a senior Democratic senator this week, said he did not regret it and added that he "felt better afterwards." Then Mr. Cheney quickly reverted to type, flying here for a tightly scripted campaign rally where he never mentioned the incident in a speech on terrorism and the economy to an adoring Republican crowd. The revelation, if that is what it was, that Mr. Cheney is comfortable with the use of four-letter words and is willing to direct them at political opponents, was the latest in a string of developments over the past few weeks that have put the vice president squarely in the spotlight. And as he takes on a higher political profile, it is hard to tell who is happier, Republicans or Democrats.
At the rally here, Mr. Cheney was immediately forgiven by some members of the invited crowd for swearing at Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont on the Senate floor on Tuesday. It showed him, they said, to be a real person who is forceful in the face of unwarranted criticism. "It tells me Cheney is very human," said Dennis Lumphrey, a hospital worker from Moville, Iowa, who was in the crowd. "It also tells me he’s not going to get pushed around. He’ll fight back. A lot of people around the world want to tell America what to do. We need to have our own direction and priorities."
President Bush’s political aides said they anticipated no negative aftereffects. In fact, the White House announced that Mr. Cheney’s campaign schedule would only intensify. Next weekend, he will take a bus tour through Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvania. And senior Republicans said he had proved himself a voice of wisdom and reassurance to voters on the two big topics of the race, the economy and the fight against terrorism. "He’s a tremendous asset to the Republican party," said Ed Gillespie, chairman of the Republican National Committee. "The rank-and-file Republican voters out there just love Dick Cheney. They appreciate his loyalty to the president, and they appreciate that he feels solid."
But Mr. Cheney has been drawing even more partisan fire than usual over the last few weeks. His aggressive defense of the administration’s assertions that Iraq was working with Al Qaeda intensified the long-running partisan and ideological clash over whether he helped lead the nation to war under false pretenses. He won a short-term legal victory when the Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a lower court had acted "prematurely" when it rejected his request to block disclosure of records from his energy policy task force. But the ruling brought the issue to the fore again, allowing Democrats to renew their attacks that he has sought to work behind closed doors to further the interests of energy companies. Now more than ever, his opponents call Mr. Cheney among the most polarizing figures in politics. Democrats portray him as the power behind the throne and the personification of militarism, corporate corruption and government secrecy. "We’ve got to get the White House back from a man who has abused his power as the leader of the free world," the comedian Billy Crystal told the crowd at a Democratic fund-raiser in Los Angeles on Thursday night. "Dick Cheney has got to go."
Mr. Bush’s Democratic rival, Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, regularly repeats Mr. Cheney’s name in much the same way Republicans have long used that of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton- as a symbol of all that is wrong with the policies and personalities of the opposing party. "Cheney’s definitely turned into a big, fat albatross around the president’s neck," said Jim Jordan, Mr. Kerry’s former campaign manager. "His public image is very bad and getting worse," Mr. Jordan said. Mr. Cheney’s aides and supporters said one of his great strengths as a campaigner was his ability to remain stoic about the way he is portrayed by Democrats and immune from the pressures of responding to the ups and downs of daily news cycles. But the exchange with Mr. Leahy on Tuesday suggested that Democrats manage to get under Mr. Cheney’s skin. |