Dick Cheney

Dick Cheney, a native of Wyoming, served as vice president of the United States under George W. Bush from 2001 to 2009. He was also secretary of defense during George Bush’s administration and chief of staff for Gerald Ford. From 1995 to 2000, he was the chairman and CEO of Halliburton, a major corporation that specializes in oilfield technologies and services.

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Did You Know?

In 2000, presidential nominee George W. Bush appointed Dick Cheney to lead his vice-presidential search committee. To the surprise of many, Bush ultimately asked Cheney himself to join him on the Republican ticket.

Dick Cheney (born January 30, 1941, Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.) was the 46th vice president of the United States (2001–09) in the Republican administration of President George W. Bush and secretary of defense (1989–93) in the administration of President George Bush.

Cheney was the son of Richard Herbert Cheney, a soil-conservation agent, and Marjorie Lauraine Dickey Cheney. Born in Nebraska, he grew up in Casper, Wyoming. He entered Yale University in 1959 but failed to graduate. Cheney earned bachelor's (1965) and master's degrees (1966) in political science from the University of Wyoming and was a doctoral candidate at the University of Wisconsin.

On August 29, 1964, he married Lynne Vincent. While Cheney worked as an aid to Wisconsin governor Warren Knowles, his wife received a doctorate in British literature from the University of Wisconsin. She later served as chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH; 1986–93), where she was criticized by liberals for undermining the agency and by conservatives for opposing the closure of a controversial NEH-funded exhibit by photographer Robert Mapplethorpe in Cincinnati, Ohio. The couple had two daughters, Elizabeth and Mary.

In 1968 Cheney moved to Washington, D.C., to serve as a congressional fellow, and beginning in 1969 he worked in the administration of President Richard Nixon. After leaving government service briefly in 1973, he became a deputy assistant to President Gerald Ford in 1974 and his chief of staff from 1975 to 1977. In 1978 he was elected from Wyoming to the first of six terms in the United States House of Representatives, where he rose to become the Republican whip. In the House Cheney took conservative positions on abortion, gun control, and environmental regulation, among other issues. In 1978 he suffered the first of several mild heart attacks, and he underwent quadruple-bypass surgery in 1988. From 1989 to 1993 he served as secretary of defense in the administration of President George Bush, presiding over reductions in the military following the breakup of the Soviet Union. Cheney also oversaw the U.S. military invasion of Panama and the participation of U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf War.

After President Bush lost his reelection bid in 1992, Cheney became a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. In 1995 he became the chairman and chief executive officer of the Halliburton Company, a supplier of technology and services to the oil and gas industries.

After George W. Bush's primary victories secured his nomination for the presidency of the United States, Cheney was appointed to head Bush's vice presidential search committee. Few expected that Cheney himself would eventually become the Republican vice presidential candidate. Two weeks after election day, Cheney suffered another mild heart attack, though he quickly resumed his duties as leader of Bush's presidential-transition team.

As vice president, Cheney was active and used his influence to help shape the administration's energy policy and foreign policy in the Middle East. He played a central, controversial role in conveying intelligence reports that Saddam Hussein of Iraq had developed weapons of mass destruction in violation of resolutions passed by the United Nations—reports used by the Bush administration to initiate the Iraq War. Following the collapse of Saddam's regime, Cheney's former company, Halliburton, secured lucrative reconstruction contracts from the U.S. government, raising the spectre of favouritism and possible wrongdoing—allegations that damaged Cheney's public reputation. Critics, who had long charged Cheney with being a secretive public servant, included members of Congress who brought suit against him for not disclosing records used to form the national energy policy.

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