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SEP 5:
Vice President Dick Cheney,
enormously popular with conservatives, will be key to turning out the Republican
base this November. But campaign officials say they will use Cheney to persuade
undecided voters as well.
Democrats delight in the prospect, saying the vice president is so divisive
that they hope swing voters hear his name again and again. Even some delegates
to the GOP convention fear that Cheney's personal style and his reputation as a
resolute conservative will turn these voters off.
The Bush campaign replies that Cheney has the stature and experience to
discuss national security, a central issue in this campaign, and that voters
know he could step seamlessly into the Oval Office if needed.
"We're not limiting him," said Bush strategist Matthew Dowd. "He's respected.
Whether or not some Democrats like him or dislike him, he's respected."
He took a prime role at the Republican National Convention, kicking off the
event at an Ellis Island rally, attending festivities in the hall each night and
delivering a searing indictment of Democrat John Kerry in his own nationally
televised speech.
Over the next two months, Cheney plans to travel as many as five days each
week to battleground states. Sometimes he will go to conservative areas where
President Bush runs strong, and sometimes to areas where the race is tighter,
Dowd said.
Bush and Cheney will travel separately -- for security reasons, the campaign
says. And planners will make sure they do not overlap their visits to an area,
to maximize crowds and local media coverage. Cheney will visit some remote areas
where airports cannot accommodate Air Force One.
Expect more "town hall meetings," where invited guests get to ask Cheney
questions. "That's a particularly good venue for him, and we think it's a very
good approach to swing votes," chief Bush strategist Karl Rove said.
And while people attending Cheney events tend to be loyalists, aides say,
what matters is the local press coverage of the event, which reaches many more
voters.
Wherever he travels, Cheney will continue to make the case that Bush is a
strong leader in fighting terrorism, and he will continue to assail Kerry's
record. He'll also keep raising money, both for the Republican Party and GOP
congressional candidates.
But unlike Kerry's running mate, John Edwards, Cheney has yet to appear in
any of Bush's television ads, which reach the largest numbers of potential
voters, and there are no plans to put him in one.
Dowd says it's a sign of Kerry's weakness that the Democrats are showcasing
Edwards in their ads, but the fact remains: Edwards is much more popular than
Cheney. Clear majorities say they would vote for Edwards if the election was for
vice president alone -- which, Republicans note, it is not.
Polling last week found Cheney's popularity at an all-time low, with the
portion of Americans who view him unfavorably more than doubling during the past
four years.
"Dick Cheney is emblematic of what a lot of people don't like about this
administration," said Kerry spokesman Phil Singer. If the Bush campaign thinks
he can help them with swing voters, Singer said, "good luck."
Cheney's been a magnet for criticism, with detractors accusing him of pushing
the country into war with Iraq, holding secret meetings with polluters and
backing unaffordable tax cuts that mostly aid the wealthy. He was accused of
conflict of interest after Halliburton Co., which he once led, won no-bid
contracts in Iraq. He cursed a senator on the Senate floor, later refusing to
apologize and even remarking, "I felt better after I said it."
None of this seems to bother Cheney, who dismisses the criticism as coming
with the job.
Still, even some of the most loyal Republicans -- delegates to the national
convention -- say it would be best to send the vice president to safe territory.
"He is more (appealing) to the base, more to the strong conservative base,"
said delegate Janet Creighton, mayor of Canton, Ohio, a classic swing town in a
swing state.
"He's a very forceful, firm individual," Creighton said. "He's not someone
who appears warm and fuzzy. There are people not attracted to him as an
individual."
Delegate Dennis Tooley of Redmond, Ore., would also like to see Cheney used
to turn out likely Republican voters.
"He's calm and collected and doesn't excite some people," he said. He'd
prefer that someone such as national security adviser Condoleezza Rice address
the undecideds. "People tend to listen more to her than someone like Dick
Cheney."
Other delegates are happy with the campaign's strategy.
His strength is talking about national security, said Michelle Colbert of
Steelville, Mo. "I think the war on terror is the main issue for independent
voters as well."
Similarly, asked what parts of Iowa he would send Cheney to, Leon Mosely of
Waterloo said simply: "All of them."
(San Francisco Chronicle) |