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Cheney Pissed Off at Bush?
According to Tuesday's New York Daily News, Dick Cheney is pissed off at George Bush for refusing to pardon convicted felon Lewis (Scooter) Libby:
Ex-VP Dick Cheney outraged President Bush didn't grant 'Scooter' Libby full pardon
BY Thomas M. Defrank
DAILY NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEFWASHINGTON - In the waning days of the Bush administration, Vice President Dick Cheney launched a last-ditch campaign to persuade his boss to pardon Lewis (Scooter) Libby - and was furious when President George W. Bush wouldn't budge.
Sources close to Cheney told the Daily News the former vice president repeatedly pressed Bush to pardon Libby, arguing his ex-chief of staff and longtime alter ego deserved a full exoneration - even though Bush had already kept Libby out of jail by commuting his 30-month prison sentence.
"He tried to make it happen right up until the very end," one Cheney associate said.
In multiple conversations, both in person and over the telephone, Cheney tried to get Bush to change his mind. Libby was convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice in the federal probe of who leaked covert CIA operative Valerie Plame's identity to the press.
Several sources confirmed Cheney refused to take no for an answer. "He went to the mat and came back and back and back at Bush," a Cheney defender said. "He was still trying the day before Obama was sworn in."
After repeatedly telling Cheney his mind was made up, Bush became so exasperated with Cheney's persistence he told aides he didn't want to discuss the matter any further.
The unsuccessful full-court press left Cheney bitter. "He's furious with Bush," a Cheney source told The News. "He's really angry about it and decided he's going to say what he believes."
He did just that the day after becoming a private citizen. In an interview with The Weekly Standard, Cheney heaped praise on Libby and denounced his conviction. "He was the victim of a serious miscarriage of justice, and I strongly believe that he deserved a presidential pardon," Cheney said. "Obviously, I disagree with President Bush's decision."
The vehemence of Cheney's last-minute onslaught has struck some Bush loyalists as excessive. "At some point you have to accept the decision of the guy who appointed you," one of them said after learning the details. "I think Cheney was over the top."
A Cheney ally disagreed. "He had every right to push it as hard as he wanted," he argued. "Cheney places great store in loyalty and thinks Scooter got a raw deal."
In July 2007, at Cheney's urging, Bush commuted Libby's 30-month prison sentence. But he also said, "I respect the jury's verdict" and noted that his decision "leaves in place a harsh punishment" for the man often described as "Cheney's Cheney." Libby was fined $250,000, and as a convicted felon, he has been disbarred from practicing law and cannot vote.
Rob Saliterman, a spokesman for the former President, said Bush would have no comment. A Cheney spokeswoman could not be reached for comment.
The latest Libby flap has injected fresh strains in a relationship that had become more businesslike than warm in recent years.
Ten days before leaving office, Bush hailed Cheney as "a fabulous vice president."
About the same time, however, an official who has worked closely with both men mused that the relationship "isn't what it was" when Bush tapped Cheney as his running mate in 2000.
"It's been a long, long time since I've heard the President say, 'Run that by the vice president's office.' You used to hear that all the time."

9 Comments so far
Show AllWow, these guys really do believe in Kings and supplication to the anointed.
As far as I can tell, Cheney's whole argument for defining a "miscarriage of justice" is the fact that Libby was a loyal servant. I do not dispute this as a fact, but I most certainly dispute that this fact therefore justifies a full pardon for his crimes.
But Cheney has always believed in an Executive branch that is above the law. In that model it is, by definition, impossible for anyone under his direct order to commit a crime. Apparently, Cheney was surprised to discover that even Bush had his limits as to how much one can defy the law while in office.....or more likely Bush just got tired of being pushed around by Cheney and decided to demonstrate to Cheney just exactly what an Imperial Presidency really means.
Yes, Dick, when you are the King's friend and confidant everything is really rosy...welcome to a very small taste of the world that the rest of us had to live in.
Heads will roll.
Cheney, so evil even Aldolph Bushler can't stand him. :(
I guess if Cheney could see the value of a sanction on Libby he might also have to consider his own actions as similarly sanctionable.
"At some point you have to accept the decision of the guy who appointed you," and "...when Bush tapped Cheney as his running mate in 2000..."
I think they got those points turned around. I seem to recall bush asked cheney to decide on a running mate for him, and cheney appointed himself.
His refusal to pardon libby is a second plus mark for bush in my book. The first was during his cabinet meeting about the second round of tax cuts for the billionaires when he said, "We already did that." Unfortunately everything else he's done over the past eight years makes these two things as inconsequential as a grain of sand on the moon.
I heard Cheney may have promised Libby he would be pardoned
and now that he isnt, Libby cant practice law.
Maybe he will talk about Cheney's involvement.
Prove there is a god.
Suck it up Vader! And word of advice, don't vacation in the Hague.
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"I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.", Albert Einstein.
Ed note: white phosphorous, dense metal super weapons, nuclear stick-up, missile defense, bailouts and propaganda!!