Word out of the White House on Thursday was that an embarrassed
McCain ‘08 campaign has reached out to Vice President Dick
Cheney’s office about inviting him to the Republican
Convention in St. Paul. Source inside Cheney’s office would not
confirm whether discussions about a Cheney appearance had taken
place. “There won’t be official word,” said one vice presidential
aide.
McCain insiders claimed that the Cheney story was blown far out
of proportion. “It’s not that we don’t want him, it’s that we
aren’t organized around who will be attending, what their role will
be or what we’re going to do there,” says one McCain adviser. Which
may very well be true.
But other McCain aides say that it was made clear that while an
appearance by President Bush was something that had to be handled
with care and as a priority, a Cheney appearance was not a priority
or an event campaign staff should focus on.
“Perhaps they thought by ignoring it that it would just go away,
but you can’t blow off a national party leader, no matter what you
may think of him,” says another McCain adviser, who said the team
is decidedly split on having both the President and Vice President
appear in St. Paul.
The antipathy toward Cheney, some McCain insiders say, is more
about the long-standing relationship between the two men, and less
about McCain distancing himself from the past seven and a half
years. “But it also reflects the ongoing struggle conservatives
have had with this candidate,” says a longtime conservative
activist in Washington. “When your most prominent surrogates are
Mitt Romney and Carly Fiorina,
and you basically treat conservatives like second-hand citizens,
you should expect to take some heat. Most conservatives like and
admire this President and like and admire this Vice President. I
think it’s fair to say that level of affection does not exist over
in Crystal City [site of McCain headquarters in northern
Virginia].”
For his part, Vice President Cheney would probably prefer not to
be in St. Paul in early September when that time could be more
productively spent fishing with friends and people who appreciate
his company and world-view.