Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., and I have much in common. We’re the same age. We grew up in McLean, Virginia with fathers in public service. Our dads were known to be tough, uncompromising Cold Warriors who also knew how to occasionally throw sharp elbows around the West Wing. Most importantly, they were both great dads.
But as much as we have in common, there’s more that divides us.
Liz grew up as an uncompromising conservative, and I was raised to be an unrepentant liberal. She supported the Iraq War just as strenuously as I opposed it. And in a bad moment in my TV career, I laughed on air at a David Letterman joke made at the expense of her ailing father.
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Liz wrote me a really tough letter after that — and rightly rebuked me. And when I say it was a tough letter, let me just say it was Cheney tough. She did not mince words. Even when I called to apologize, she did not let me off the hook. Not even a bit. While I had little use for her politics and had never really been able to find a way to connect with her personally, I was impressed by a daughter’s fierce defense of her father. Watching my own father (a former national security advisor under Jimmy Carter) attacked over the decades made me appreciate that letter even more.
Liz’s uncompromising resilience and principled strength were on display once again this week. She was booted from her GOP leadership spot for refusing to go along with her reprobate and deceitful Republican colleagues, who continue to lay prostrate before former President Donald Trump and bleat that the election was stolen from him. Liz’s message was strong and clear: I will tell the truth, do what is right, and defend democracy, no matter the personal cost. As Joe and I watched her eloquent defense of American democracy, neither of us were surprised by her iron will.









