In June, House investigators revealed that Vice President Dick
Cheney had exempted his office from an executive order order designed
to safeguard classified national security information by claiming that
the Office of the Vice President is not an “entity
within the executive branch.”
After Congressional Democrats called
his bluff by threatening to withhold funding from his office, the
White House was forced to roll back their rhetoric, claiming “that
the rationale had been the view of the vice president’s lawyers,
not Cheney
himself.”
But in an
interview with CBS News’ Mark Knoller today, Cheney refused
to say he was a member of the executive branch:
Mark Knoller: Are you part of the executive branch, sir?
Vice President Cheney: Well, the job of Vice President is
an interesting one, because you have a foot in both the executive
and the legislative branch. Obviously, I have an office in
the West Wing of the White House, I am an adviser to the president,
I sit as a member of the National Security Council. At the same time,
under the constitution, I have legislative responsibilities. I’m
actually paid by the Senate, not by the executive. […]
KNOLLER: But you are principally a part of the executive branch,
are you not?
CHENEY: Well, I suppose you could argue it either way. The
fact is I do work in both branches.
Cheney conceded that he was part of the executive branch during the
two hours and five minutes he served as acting President two weeks
ago while Bush was in surgery. Throughout the entire interview, however,
he refused to say whether or not the Office of the Vice President itself
was classified as part of the executive branch.
Cheney has been happy to treat the Office of the Vice President as
part of the executive branch when it suits his political purposes:
- In 2001, the White House argued that a probe into Cheney’s
energy task force “would unconstitutionally interfere with the
functioning of the executive branch.”
- Cheney himself said that the probe concerned “meetings
in the Executive Branch between the Vice President and other individuals.”
- On April 9, 2003, Cheney lauded a recent court ruling, stating,
“I think it restored some of the legitimate authority of the
executive branch, the president and the vice president, to be
able to conduct their business.”
Now that the political tempest over Cheney’s exemption of his
office has subsided a bit, the Vice President is back to claiming he
is a branch of government all to himself — or as he says it, “a
unique creature” in constitutional government.
The full interview can be heard here.