Cheney’s destruction of executive power
By Sean Aqui | Related entries in Bad Decisions, Law, Military, News, The War On Terrorism
The Washington Post is publishing an excellent four-part series examining Dick Cheney’s role in the current administration, from terrorism to the economy to the environment. The first two installments are already out, with the next two coming tomorrow and Wednesday.
The series’ name, “Angler”, seems pretty odd until you realize it’s Cheney’s Secret Service codename. Though relying heavily on anonymous sources, the breadth, depth and carefulness of the reporting is impressive: More than 200 interviews with administration insiders with direct experience working with or against Cheney, who gave the reporters access to notes, calendars and other records to bolster their words. This isn’t a careless, anonymously sourced hatchet job, and the story names so many names that if its claims are not accurate they would be easily demolished. This appears to be “best-practice” use of anonymous sources.
In Sunday’s piece, Barton Gellman and Jo Becker detail how Cheney operates: behind the scenes, in secret, depending on his extraordinarily close relationship with President Bush to bypass other agencies and the normal review mechanisms and essentially upend the traditional model of the vice-president’s role.
There’s nothing particularly wrong with that; A VP who is the president’s chief adviser or doppleganger could be very useful, and at a minimum is a way to squeeze extra value out of what has long been a mostly ceremonial post. Sure, one can always paint Cheney as some sort of Rasputin (or, in the current parlance, Lord Voldemort), but there’s little evidence to back that up: it’s not like he is blackmailing or hypnotizing Bush. It’s what Cheney has done with that influence — not the influence itself — that deserves criticism.
(continued over at Midtopia)
This entry was posted on Monday, June 25th, 2007 and is filed under Bad Decisions, Law, Military, News, The War On Terrorism. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.








