GOP Delegates Open to Vice President Other Than Cheney
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Aug. 26, 2004
More: GOP Endorses Ban on Same-Sex Marriage
WASHINGTON – More than half the delegates to next week's
Republican National Convention were willing to suggest a new
running mate for President Bush if Dick Cheney leaves the ticket,
an Associated Press survey found.
Secretary of State Colin Powell and former New York City Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani top the list. But the president's support of
Cheney remains bedrock, and no delegates said outright they wanted
to get rid of him, even as a few spoke wistfully of other names.
Story Continues Below
Most interviews occurred before Cheney's comments Tuesday about
his opposition to President Bush's call for a constitutional
amendment banning gay marriage, remarks that have produced an outcry
among social conservatives in his party.
Roughly 9 percent of delegates named Powell, who spurned Bush's
vice presidential overtures in 2000. That was slightly ahead of
Giuliani, considered a potential 2008 presidential candidate.
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice was third at more
than 7 percent, followed by two influential GOP senators: John
McCain of Arizona and Majority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee.
Just a handful of delegates, such as William Wiess Jr. of Phoenix,
were vocal about their preference for someone other than Cheney.
"For the party, the best thing, a win for Bush, would be
McCain," said Wiess, 43. "I think he brings the party more toward
the moderate flanks."
McCain was the choice of almost 5 percent of delegates.
The biggest response, about 45 percent, to the
question, "If Vice President Cheney were to step aside, who would
be your first choice to be President Bush's running mate?" was
"None." That covered those who refused to answer questions, gave
no response or declined to answer because they thought Cheney
wouldn't be booted from the ticket in the first place.
'No Rational Basis'
Delegate Ron Schmidt, 67, a Republican National Committee member
from Rapid City, S.D., called Cheney "a very positive force in the
party."
"There's no rational basis for him to step aside. Not a single
argument," he added.
Bush himself has made clear he wants to keep the ticket intact,
and campaign officials insist that replacing Cheney never has been
actively considered.
Bush's advisers are keenly aware that Cheney has high negatives, from his Halliburton connections to his strong push for war with
Iraq and his prolonged insistence of ties between al-Qaida and
Iraq.
Despite Cheney's decades of political experience, there is also
worry among some Republicans about unfavorable comparisons with
John Edwards, 50, the youthful-looking Democrat vice presidential
candidate who has served one term in the Senate.
Still, Cheney is loved by the GOP's conservative base, many of
whom will be on the convention floor, despite his recent comments
about gay marriages.
Cheney's daughter Mary is a lesbian, and in a campaign stop
Tuesday, the vice president said that people should be free to have
the relationships they want and that existing law might be enough to
uphold traditional marriage.
'Tremendous Opportunity'
The AP surveyed about three-quarters of the 2,500-plus GOP
convention delegates. Those willing to speculate about a name to
replace Cheney didn't necessarily think there was any chance Bush
would shake up the ticket.
"Be still my beating heart. Condoleezza Rice. If she refused,
Colin Powell. I don't think we'll even get there anyway," said
delegate William Black, 62, of Danville, Ill. "I just think that
would be a tremendous opportunity for
the party, given Mr. Cheney's health."
Cheney, 63, has had four heart attacks since 1978, the most
recent coming in November 2000. The vice president had a pacemaker
placed in his chest the following year, and his last annual heart
checkup in May yielded no signs of irregularities.
Polls show that people are evenly split on whether they have a
favorable or unfavorable impression of Cheney. In contrast, people
hold a favorable view of Edwards.
But replacing Cheney "would create a firestorm among
conservatives in the Republican Party. There's no redeeming value
for Republicans," said Terry Madonna, a political scientist at
Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pa.
Besides, Madonna adds, vice presidential candidates historically
have little bearing on the outcome of presidential elections because
the spotlight is squarely on the top of the ticket.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
Condi Rice for President? Find out the details - Click Here Now
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
2004 Elections
Bush Administration
George W. Bush
Presidential Conventions
RNC