in the dark mind of Dick Cheney…

Posted on Tuesday 9 October 2007


The Bush administration has long held that President Bush’s expanded executive power is justified due to 9/11. “I believe in a strong, robust executive authority and I think that the world we live in demands it,” claimed Vice President Cheney in 2005.

But in his new book, Takeover: The Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy, Boston Globe reporter Charlie Savage reveals that Cheney has been on a thirty-year quest to implement his views of unfettered executive power.

For example, when it was revealed in 2005 that the Bush administration had been illegally spying on Americans, Cheney responded: “If you want to understand why this program is legal…go back and read my Iran-Contra report.” In that report — authored in 1987 — Cheney and aide David Addington defended President Reagan by claiming it was “unconstitutional for Congress to pass laws intruding” on the “commander in chief.”

Decades later, Bush’s legal team used their first meeting in January 2001 — nine months before 9/11 — to map out a plan to expand presidential authority. According to Savage, who appeared on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal this morning, Cheney was looking for a moment to “seize” power in the weeks before 9/11: "We are going to expand presidential power in any way we can. This was discussed in January 2001 at the first meeting of the White House legal team after the inauguration, long before 9/11. If an opportunity arises to expand presidential prerogatives, you will seize it."
Charlie Savage is the Pulitzer Prize winning Journalist with the Boston Globe who exposed and documented Bush’s abuse of Signing Statements – attachments to Congressional Bills that reformulate them to the Administration’s liking. Here, he’s digging deeper into the origins of the Imperial Presidency of George Bush and Dick Cheney. It has long been clear that this Unitary Executive was premeditated, but Savage is tracing it back in time – presumabely to the Nixon Era. It’s like the watchword of this Administration has been, "Don’t make Nixon’s mistake."

Obviously, people who want to play it straight don’t need to plan in advance how not to "make Nixon’s mistake." I haven’t read Savage’s book so I don’t know all of what he thinks Cheney had in mind. Cheney wanted to "expand presidential power in any way we can" in order to do what exactly? We know about the foreign policy part. We know about the dissolution of social programs. We know about the pro-business, pro-corporation, pro-oil parts. We know about the throwing off the Geneva Conventions. We know about the hostility towards the U.N. I wonder what else?

Dick Cheney is a man driven by one emotion – hatred – and with one goal – power. I don’t think we know how that came to be. All we know for sure is the final product…

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