Biography
American politician, selected as a running mate by George W. Bush on
7/24/2000. He brings to the GOP ticket a wealth of foreign policy
experience and political stature and formerly served in the cabinet of
President George Bush.
A rock-solid conservative, Cheney opposes abortion rights, opposes
gun-control and has opposed the Clean Water Act and Endangered Species
Act. He has voted against Environmental Cleanups and has supported Oil
Drilling in Alaska's wilderness. He is a staunch supporter of Defense, the
production of chemical weapons. He supports the death penalty. He favors
raising the Social Security retirement age from 65 to 67 and opposes
coverage of long-term care for the chronically ill. He opposes the Equal
Rights Amendment and supports prayer in public schools.
Cheney attended Yale University on a scholarship but dropped out after
three semesters. He took a job with the Utilities Company working as a
lineman for two years before resuming his education at the University of
Wyoming, his future wife’s home. Lynne Ann Vincent was born 8/14/1941 in
Casper, Wyoming. At school, Dick played football and was senior class
president, and Lynne was homecoming queen. They married on 8/29/1964 and
have two daughters, Elizabeth and Mary.
After a B.A. in 1965 and an M.A. in 1966 in Political Science, Cheney
left school in 1968 without completing his Ph.D. dissertation. The family
moved to the Washington, DC area in 1969 when Cheney took a Congressional
internship. In February 1973, Cheney became Vice President at a
Washington-based investment firm. After Gerald Ford became U.S. President,
Chaney became deputy to White House Chief of Staff Rumsfield. In September
1974, he was named Deputy Assistant by President Ford and the following
year, on 11/05/1975, he became Ford’s chief of staff.
Returning to Wyoming in 1976, Cheney ran for a seat in the House of
Representatives. He had a mild heart attach during the primaries, and won
the election, serving from 1978-89, eventually becoming House Republican
whip. On 3/10/1989, he was named Secretary of Defense by President George
Bush and he earned widespread praise for his handling of the Gulf War in
1991. He was known as the congressman who never saw a weapons system he
didn't love.
Lynne also became a prominent political figure, serving as chairwoman
of the National Endowment of the Humanities from 1986 to 1993, under Bush
and, previously, Ronald Reagan. With a PhD from the University of
Wisconsin in British Literature, she has written many books, including one
with her husband, “Kings of the Hill: How Nine Powerful Men Changed the
Course of American History.” "What you've seen on television is
what I've seen at home," says his wife. "He's calm, deliberate,
not given to speechifying in an old-fashioned way, just says what he
thinks the situation is. He's an unusual politician, not a back-slapping
kind of guy. He works a room very well, by talking about things that are
real and serious. He doesn't do small talk."
As a householder, he does not do the12-hour days that interfere with
his home life but goes home at night to have dinner and talk over their
day with Lynne. His low-key profile includes shopping and cooking duties
alongside Lynne.
In 1993, Cheney moved into the private sector, serving as chairman and
CEO of Dallas-Based Halliburton Corp., an engineering and construction
company for oil companies that specialize in the development of oil and
gas production around the world.
The presidential elections were held on 11/07/2000, leading to one of
the most dramatic and confusing contests ever witnessed. When the issue of
uncounted ballots finally went to the Supreme Court, the conclusion was
upheld on December 12 that Bush was the winner by a number of several
hundred votes. Dick Cheney was the new vice-president of the United
States, sworn in on 1/20/2001.
Dick Cheney checked himself into the hospital "very early in the
morning" on 11/22/2000 after feeling chest pains. The news reported
he did turn out to have a "very mild heart attack" with surgery
to put a stint in (which keeps a weak artery open). His previous
"mild heart attacks" were in 1978, 1984 and in 1988 when he had
quadruple bypass surgery.
After four heart attacks, Cheney is clearly aware of alert signals in
his body. He checked himself into a Washington hospital once more on
3/05/2001 to clear a partly blocked artery after he complained of chest
pains. Doctors at George Washington University said that a coronary artery
that was opened last November had narrowed again by 90% because of scar
tissue and that the tube was reopened with a balloon angioplasty and he
would resume his vice-presidential duties later in the week.
On September 1, 2004 at about 10:24 PM in New York at the Republican
National Convention, Cheney accepted the nomination for a second term as
Vice President on the Bush-Cheney ticket (time from observation, not
official news source).
In the election held November 2, 2004, he and Bush won the popular and
electoral votes, for another four years in office.
At 11:49 AM on January 20, 2005 the Vice President completed his oath
of office for his second term (time taken from personal observation).
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