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By DAVID M. SHRIBMAN Boston Globe WASHINGTON - He served as acting president for 2 hours and 15 minutes late last week, when President Bush was under heavy sedation during a colonoscopy at Camp David. He has raised more than $11 million for Republican candidates and party activities in the first half of this year alone. His whereabouts has frequently been kept secret, heightening the sense of his indispensability within the Bush administration. Dick Cheney is a different kind of vice president. Daniel Webster turned down the position in 1828, saying that he didn't want to be buried until he was dead. Walter F. Mondale described the job as being "fire hydrant of the nation." Mondale shouldn't have been surprised; his mentor, Hubert H. Humphrey, liked to tell the old story about the mother who had two sons. (One went to sea; the other became vice president. Neither was ever heard of again.) Al Gore loved to quote Thomas Marshall, who served under Woodrow Wilson and who said that being vice president was like being a man in a cataleptic state: You can't speak, you can't move, you suffer no pain, and yet you are perfectly conscious of everything that is going on around you. But the vice presidency suits Cheney, raising the question of whether the former White House chief of staff and onetime member of the House Republican leadership might be pioneering a new role - and thus becoming a new model - for the vice presidency. Cheney is the elder statesman of the Bush administration, known for his judgment and respected for his cool approach to crisis. He is no Clark Clifford, the Missouri lawyer who liked to be regarded as counsel to the presidents but who was brought into the inner circle only for specific tasks. Cheney is there all the time. Indeed, all of Washington noted that Cheney's tenure as acting president began at 7:09 on a Saturday morning and that he was at his post at that hour, receiving an intelligence briefing and presiding over staff meetings. The rest of the capital power establishment was asleep, in line for bagels, or cutting up oranges for the soccer team. The key to Cheney's profile in the administration is the certainty that the former Wyoming lawmaker isn't seeking the presidency himself. Webster lusted after the White House, and though John Adams and Thomas Jefferson were elected president after terms as vice president, Webster believed that by the end of the first quarter of the 19th century the likelihood of moving up was small. (Though Martin Van Buren moved directly from being vice president to president in 1837, no man repeated the feat until President Bush's father did so in 1989.) Humphrey, Mondale, and Gore always wanted to be president, ambitions that helped to thwart their vice presidencies. Until now, presidential nominees have used the vice presidency as a lure to power-seekers and to balance their own attributes. John F. Kennedy knew he needed a Dixie anchor, but the Kennedy forces were so worried that Lyndon B. Johnson might seek to expand the role of the vice presidency that Robert F. Kennedy was dispatched to Johnson's Biltmore suite to remind the Texan he would have no independence and little latitude as vice president. Johnson nodded his assent, but didn't believe it. When one of his friends remarked that LBJ would have less power as vice president than as Senate majority leader, Johnson argued, "Power is where power goes." Johnson was alternately bored and angry and almost always frustrated as vice president. But when he became president and won his own term in 1964, he repeated the pattern, choosing an energetic, compelling figure from the Senate, Humphrey of Minnesota. Johnson humbled and humiliated him, eventually rendering one of the heroes of 20th-century liberalism so powerless that he became a target of ridicule. Cheney's lack of presidential ambition frees him from frustration and frees the president to use him widely. When Gore went on a fund-raising spree that got him into legal trouble, the motivation was obvious: He was collecting the political chits that would help him lay the groundwork for his own presidential campaign. In modern times, that road had been pioneered by Richard M. Nixon, an ambitious freshman senator from California plucked for the vice presidency by Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952. There wasn't a Lincoln Day Dinner in a corner of the country too remote for Nixon. His diligence earned him the 1960 nomination, even though Eisenhower said it would take him a week to think of an administration initiative that bore Nixon's fingerprints. Now Cheney can bounce from Evansville, Ind., (raising an estimated $200,000 for Representative John Hostettler) to Fayetteville, Ark., (raking in $190,000 for Senator Tim Hutchinson) to Lower Paxton Township, Pa., (boosting Representative George W. Gekas's war chest by $200,000) without anyone thinking that Cheney is thinking about convention delegates. He's not. He can also tell the president what he thinks. He may be the first vice president who has made the job work for himself and for the president he serves. He's the first vice president who regards the job as an end in itself. As such, he may not be the last. ..... This column was originally published July 2, 2002
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"He is the very model of a modern 2d fiddle" Headline by Jim Franklin of the Boston Globe: This is an example of a headline focused, as I think most column heads should be, not on the lead, but on the goal, the climax of the column. The column was written by our Washington bureau chief, David Shribman, who won a Pulitzer in 1995 for beat reporting. His Monday column specializes on political analysis and runs in news space. I'm hoping to point the reader at where he's headed in this one, but not to give the game away. If there's any charm to the head, it is borrowed from the patter of librettist William Gilbert and relies on the echo of Arthur Sullivan's melody. Good headlines are often stolen from far better writers.
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