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by Helen Dewar and
Dana Milbank

Washington Post
Staff Writers
Friday, June 25, 2004; Page A04
Clash With Leahy
About Halliburton
A brief argument
between Vice President Cheney and a senior Democratic senator led Cheney
to utter a big-time obscenity on the Senate floor this week.
On Tuesday, Cheney, serving in
his role as president of the Senate, appeared in the chamber for a photo
session. A chance meeting with Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (Vt.), the ranking
Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, became an argument about Cheney's
ties to Halliburton Co., an international energy services corporation, and
President Bush's judicial nominees. The exchange ended when Cheney offered
some crass advice.
"Fuck yourself," said the man
who is a heartbeat from the presidency.
Leahy's spokesman, David
Carle, yesterday confirmed the brief but fierce exchange. "The vice
president seemed to be taking personally the criticism that Senator Leahy
and others have leveled against Halliburton's sole-source contracts in
Iraq," Carle said.
As it happens, the exchange
occurred on the same day the Senate passed legislation described as the
"Defense of Decency Act" by 99 to 1.
Cheney's office did not deny
that the phrase was uttered. His spokesman, Kevin S. Kellems, would say
only that this language is not typical of the vice presidential
vocabulary. "Reserving the right to revise and extend my remarks, that
doesn't sound like language the vice president would use," Kellems said,
"but there was a frank exchange of views."
Gleeful Democrats pointed out that the White House
has not always been so forgiving of obscenity. In December, Democratic
presidential candidate John F. Kerry was quoted using the same word in
describing Bush's Iraq policy as botched. The president's chief of staff
reacted with indignation.
"That's beneath John Kerry," Chief of Staff Andrew H.
Card Jr. said. "I'm very disappointed that he would use that kind of
language. I'm hoping that he's apologizing at least to himself, because
that's not the John Kerry that I know."
This was not the first foray into French by Cheney
and his boss.
During the 2000 campaign, Bush pointed out a New York Times reporter to
Cheney and said, without knowing the microphone was picking it up,
"major-league [expletive]." Cheney's response -- "Big Time" -- has
become his official presidential nickname.
Then there was that famous Talk magazine interview of
Bush by Tucker Carlson in 1999, in which the future president repeatedly
used the F-word.
Tuesday's exchange began when
Leahy crossed the aisle at the photo session and joked to Cheney about
being on the Republican side, according to Carle. Then Cheney, according
to Carle, "lashed into" Leahy for remarks he made Monday criticizing Iraq
contracts won without competitive bidding by Halliburton, Cheney's former
employer.
Leahy, Carle said, retorted that Democrats "have not
appreciated White House collusion in smears" that Democrats were
anti-Catholic for blocking judicial nominees such as William H. Pryor Jr.
Democrats demanded that Bush disavow the allegations by conservative
groups, but the White House did not.
The Democratic National
Committee has declared this to be "Halliburton Week" to portray
administration ties to the controversial company. "Sounds like it's making
somebody a little testy," Kerry spokesman Chad Clanton said.
Republicans did their best to defend the vice
president. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah),
while pointing out that he was unaware of the incident, described Cheney
as "very honest" and said: "I don't blame anyone for standing up for his
integrity."
There is no rule against
obscene language by a vice president on the Senate floor. The senators
were present for a group picture and not in session, so Rule 19 of the
Senate rules -- which prohibits vulgar statements "unbecoming a senator"
-- does not apply, according to a Senate official. Even if the Senate were
in session, the vice president, though constitutionally the president of
the Senate, is an executive branch official and therefore free to use
whatever language he likes.
© 2004 The
Washington Post Company
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