Sat. Nov 16th, 2024

Liz Cheney Biography

Liz Cheney (Elizabeth Lynne Cheney) an American attorney and politician serving as Wyoming’s lone member of Congress in the United States House of Representatives as of 2017. She served as the House of Republican Conference Chair, the third-highest position in the House Republican leadership. and being the third woman to be elected in that position after Deborah Pryce and Cathy McMorris.

Liz Cheney Age

Liz was born on July 28, 1966, in Madison, Wisconsin, the United States of America. She celebrates her birthday on July 28th every year.

Liz Cheney Career

Liz began working for the State Department for 5 years. She also worked for the United States Agency for International Development between 1989 and 1993. Within no time, she got a different job at the consulting firm; Armitage Associates LLP, a firm founded by Richard Armitage. This was before pursuing a J.D. degree in 1996.

After graduating from Law School, she practiced law at the law firm of White & Case. In addition, she worked as an international law attorney and consultant at the International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group.

In a different setup, Liz worked as a Special Assistant to the Deputy Secretary of State for Assistance to the F=former Soviet Union. She further served as a USAID officer in the United States embassies in Budapest and Warsaw. In 2002, Cheney joined the state department after an appointment by the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs. Under this position, she oversaw the Middle East Partnership initiative.

In 2003, Cheney left her position to serve in her father’s 2004 Vice-President re-election campaign. Later in 2005, she returned to the State Department after an appointment by the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretay of State for Near Eastern Affairs and Coordination of Broader Middle East and Northern Africa Initiatives.

Under the position, Liz oversaw the launch of two semi-independent foundations namely; the Fund of the Future, and the Foundation of the Future. She further endorsed a draft of a new Iraqi constitution as well as heading the Iran Syria Policy and Operations Group (ISOG).

After her term in the State Department, Liz signed on as one of three national co-chairs of FredThompson’s 2008 presidential campaign. However, Thompson dropped out of the race. This move made her the senior foreign policy advisor for Mitt Romney’s 2008 presidential campaign.

In October 2009, together Wiliam Kristol and Deborah Burlingame launched the non-profit organization, Keep America Safe. This is an organization geared to provide information for concerned Americans about critical national security issues.

In January 2012, Liz joined Fox News where she guest-hosted Hannity and Fox News Sunday. However, in July 2013, she left Fox News and announced her intention to run for the United States Senate in Wyoming in 2014. She later withdrew from the race citing family health issues.

In February 2016, Liz announced her candidacy for Wyoming’s lone seat in the United States House of Representatives, after Cynthia Lummis had announced her retirement from the seat. Amazingly, Liz won the seat with over 60% of the total votes cast. In January 2017, she was sworn into office and later elected by the Republican membership as the Chari of the House Republican Conference for the 116th Congress.

Liz Cheney Net Worth

Cheney has an estimated net worth of between $10 million and $15 million. She also earns an annual salary of $1 million.

Liz Cheney Family

Liz was born the elder daughter of former U.S vice president Dick Cheney and his wife Lynne Cheney. She was raised up alonf with her younger sister named Mary Cheney.

Liz Cheney Husband

Liz is married to Philip Jonathan Perry, an American attorney who previously served as a political appointee in the administration of President George W. Bush. He as well served as an acting associate attorney general at the Department of Justice, general counsel of the Office of Management and Budget, as well as the general counsel of the Department of Homeland Security. Together, they have been blessed with five children.

Liz Cheney Children

Perry and Liz are blessed with five children named Grace Peery, Kate Perry, and Elizabeth Perry while the sons are; Philip Richard Perry and Richard Perry.

Liz Cheney Education

Cheney partly enrolled for her sixth and seventh grade in Casper, Wyoming as her father campaigned for Congress. She then joined McLean High School, graduating in 1984 where she was an active cheerleader. She later joined Colorado College for her Bachelor of Arts degree.

In 1996, she earned a J.D. degree from the University of Chicago Law School after studying courses in Middle Eastern history at the Oriental Institute.

Liz Cheney Controversy, Replacement and Republican

Cheney has become the figurehead of the conservative Never Trumpers – but the Wyoming congresswoman was for the former president in the last election.

Newly removed from House Republican leadership, Cheney spoke to ABC’s This Week. Asked if she regretted voting for Trump in 2020, she said: “I was never going to support Joe Biden and I do regret the vote. I think that it was based on policy, based on sort of substance and what I know in terms of the kinds of policies [Trump] put forward that were good for the country.”

Cheney came out against Trump after the deadly attack on the US Capitol on 6 January, by supporters he told to “fight like hell” in service of his lie that his defeat by Joe Biden was the result of electoral fraud.

Most of the congressional GOP has stayed behind Trump – one representative claimed this week those who entered the Capitol were as orderly as tourists.

“It’s indefensible,” Cheney said. “I will never forget seeing the law enforcement officers, the members of the Swat team, the rapid response forces, seeing them and their exhaustion. And they had been through hand-to-hand combat – and you know, people died.

“And the notion that this was somehow a tourist event is disgraceful and despicable. And I won’t be part of whitewashing what happened on 6 January. Nobody should be part of it. And people ought to be held accountable.”

Cheney was one of 10 House Republicans to vote for Trump’s impeachment on a charge of inciting an insurrection. Trump was acquitted after only seven Republican senators followed suit.

Cheney also told ABC Kevin McCarthy, the House minority leader, should either voluntarily testify before any 6 January commission about his conversation with Trump as the attack happened, or be compelled to do so.

Cheney is a staunch conservative and a daughter of Dick Cheney, a former secretary of defense and vice-president. As such she is a member of a party establishment either beaten into near-silence by Trump’s harangues, like the Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell; vilified by Trump’s supporters, like Utah senator and 2012 nominee Mitt Romney; or simply acquiescent.

Trump remains excluded from social media over his role in the Capitol riot but on Saturday he issued statements replete with rants about supposed electoral fraud which one Arizona GOP official called “unhinged” and “insane”. On ABC, interviewer Jonathan Karl asked if Cheney would stay in her party should Trump win the nomination in 2024.

Cheney said she would do “everything necessary to make sure he never gets anywhere close to the Oval Office again”.

But, Karl repeated, would she remain in the party if Trump were the nominee?

“I will not support him,” said Cheney. “And we’ll do everything I can to make sure that doesn’t happen.”

Asked if she would run for president, Cheney said she was focused on re-election in Wyoming. Asked if her father wanted her to run, she said: “Well, yeah, but he’s my dad, so he’s not objective.”

Some Republicans outside Congress have mooted a new party. Most observers think that unlikely to succeed. Karl pointed out that Republicans who have stood up to Trump, including senators Bob Corker and Jeff Flake, have been run out of town.

Cheney said only a “handful” of Republicans believed Trump’s lies. But, she said, “there are many members who have expressed concern about their own security. And I think that’s an important point to think about as well, that we now live in a country where members’ votes are affected because they’re worried about their security, they’re worried about threats on their lives.

“But there’s no question that at this moment, the majority of the Republican party is not where I am.”

The brewing Republican civil war dominated the Sunday talkshows. Another Trump critic, Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, spoke to NBC’s Meet the Press – as did Dan Crenshaw of Texas.

Kinzinger said Cheney “just simply answered questions that the election was not stolen. And then Donald Trump dozens and dozens of times says it is. It’s not Liz’s fault.” He also said he had been a Republican “a lot longer than Trump has and I’m not going to let him come in and hijack my party … that’s what the fight’s about.”

Crenshaw claimed the issue was an “internal drama” about which voters did not care, attacked supposed media bias and said: “I won’t say Trump is the devil but I don’t think he’s Jesus either.”

Fred Upton, a Michigan representative who has been close to Biden, spoke to CNN’S State of the Union. He called attempts to deny events at the Capitol “absolutely bogus” and said allegiance to Trump would guarantee defeat.

“We’re not going to win unless we’re a big tent,” Upton said.

The Maryland governor, Larry Hogan, a likely presidential contender, told CNN Trump was “toxic for the party”.

Cheney’s replacement as the No3 House Republican, Elise Stefanik, spoke to Fox News. The New Yorker, once a moderate, told Sunday Morning Futures Cheney was “looking backwards”.

“Republicans are looking forward, we are unified and we are talking about conservative principles. President Trump is an important voice in the party … I’m proud to represent the vast majority of Republicans and that’s why we needed to make a change of House conference chair.”

Cheney told ABC that with her party in Trump’s grip, there was “no question” something like the Capitol attack could happen again.

“We’ve seen how far President Trump was willing to go,” she said. “We’ve seen not only his provocation of the attack, but his refusal to send help when it was needed, his refusal to immediately say, ‘Stop.’ And that in and of itself, in my view, was a very clear violation of his oath and of his duty.

“I think the issue really is Donald Trump and it really is the party and whether we’re going to be a party that’s based on the truth.”

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