Like the man behind the curtain working the levers in The Wizard of Oz, Dick Cheney has been called the real power in US President George W. Bush's administration, perhaps the strongest vice president in US history.
But as Bush enters his second term, Cheney's role is in flux. His chief task in Bush's first administration -- mentoring a novice president with little foreign policy or legislative experience -- has been accomplished. He remains dogged by heart disease and an FBI probe of a subsidiary of Halliburton, the company he once ran.
Indeed, some wonder whether Cheney, with no ambition to succeed his boss in the White House, will serve out his second term.
And while he has redefined a job that traditionally involved attending ceremonial and campaign events or undertaking thankless policy assignments, there is speculation Cheney's influence is waning.
"He was so influential that it was almost insulting to call him a vice president," said Paul Light, professor of public service at New York University. "He was a mentor, chair of the kitchen Cabinet, legitimizer, Rasputin -- you name it -- all rolled into one. Those roles have been chipped away over time."
Still, Cheney is likely to remain the administration point man on several fronts. As Bush turns in his second term to forging his presidency's legacy, he is expected to use Cheney to push his domestic agenda -- overhauling Social Security and the tax code -- in Congress, where Cheney served for 10 years as a Wyoming congressman and where he still enjoys strong influence among House conservatives.
With Republicans seeking to keep the White House in 2008, Cheney will likely be involved behind the scenes in promoting a candidate Bush can endorse as his successor.
Franc conceded that early in his first term Bush, 58, "was deferring quite a bit" to Cheney, 63.
He dismissed speculation that the FBI investigation into whether a Halliburton subsidiary improperly received lucrative federal government contracts for work in Iraq without competitive bidding was a serious distraction that could put pressure on Cheney to step down or render him ineffective.
Similarly, it's not clear that Cheney's health problems could shorten his time in office. In 2001, he had an implantable defibrillator inserted in his chest. The device is designed to activate automatically if needed to regulate his heartbeat. Cheney also takes medication to lower his cholesterol and has said he is exercising and eating more healthily.
John Nichols, author of the book, Dick: The Man Who is President, said in an interview that Cheney may well "take a lesser role in the spotlight" as the political ambitions of Republican presidential aspirants emerge.
"Cheney is somewhat disempowered because there will be people moving to make a name within the administration and in the periphery of it," Nichols said. "He may even step back and allow someone else to have a definitional role."
But, he added, "My prediction is that Dick Cheney will remain in the second term the most powerful vice president in American history by quietly peopling" the administration "with folks he's familiar with and who are ideological and personal allies."
Cheney's power troubles one former vice president -- Democrat Walter Mondale, who held the job in president Jimmy Carter's one-term administration.
Mondale said it appeared that Cheney was "directly and operationally involved in central issues" in a way that put him between key government officials and the president, possibly inhibiting their advice to Bush.
"I would have considered it improper," Mondale said. "I was always afraid of intimidating other public officers by implying that I was representing the president.
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