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Former US vice-president Dick Cheney died on Tuesday at the age of 84, marking the end of a political life that helped define an era of post-9/11 conservatism — and, in later years, symbolised how deeply the Republican Party had changed under Donald Trump.Dick Cheney’s isolation from the Republican Party happened in plain sight. After he started speaking out against Trump, the invitations stopped coming. He was no longer asked to attend party dinners, conventions, or conservative events where he had once been treated with respect. Many of his old allies avoided him, not wanting to be seen with someone who did not like Trump. Big party donors cut ties, and Republican leaders who once called him for advice stayed silent.
In his home state of Wyoming, local party officials left his name off guest lists and public programmes. When his daughter Liz Cheney was removed from her leadership post, it made the family’s exile complete.
From party stalwart to party outcast
Cheney served as the 46th Vice-President of the United States from 2001 to 2009 under President George W. Bush, where he was seen as one of the most powerful vice-presidents in modern American history. He played a decisive role in shaping US national security policy after the September 11 attacks that killed thousands, overseeing the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, and becoming the face of America’s “war on terror.
”Yet, in the decade that followed, the once-dominant Republican voice became a vocal critic of his own party’s evolution. As Trump’s influence grew, Cheney stood apart — rejecting the MAGA chief's populist tone and attacks on democratic institutions.He said bluntly, “In our nation’s history, there has never been an individual who is a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump.”
The breaking points
Cheney’s criticism of Trump was deliberate and consistent.
- In December 2015, when Trump called for a ban on Muslims entering the United States, Cheney dismissed it outright, saying the proposal “goes against everything we stand for and believe in.” He saw it as an affront to American values, not a policy debate. That early rebuke set the tone for what would become nearly a decade of tension between the former vice-president and the man who came to dominate his party.
- In March 2019, he privately warned then–Vice President Mike Pence that the Trump administration “looks a lot more like Barack Obama than Ronald Reagan,” a clear dismay over Trump’s foreign policy direction.
- After the January 6, 2021 Capitol riot, Cheney saw Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election as a direct assault on the Constitution. He accused Trump of trying to “steal the last election using lies and violence to keep himself in power after the voters had rejected him.”
- In August 2022, Cheney released a scathing TV ad supporting his daughter Liz Cheney’s re-election campaign, calling Trump “a coward” and repeating that “a real man wouldn’t lie to his supporters. He lost his election, and he lost big.”
- Then, in September 2024, Cheney took his break with the GOP even further, saying he would vote for Kamala Harris over Trump, again warning that Trump remained “the greatest threat to our republic.”
What this reveals about the party shift
Cheney’s alienation sheds light on the bigger transformation within the Republican Party — from its traditional base of national security conservatives to a movement dominated by Trump’s populism, extensive public relations and personal loyalty.Once a symbol of post-9/11 Republican strength, Cheney became a political exile in the Trump era. His attacks made him a pariah among many in the GOP, as Trump reshaped the party’s priorities around grievance, culture wars, and election denialism.Cheney’s story is a warning of what happens to Republicans who refuse to bend to Trump’s movement. His opposition wasn’t about ideology but about allegiance and integrity — a stand that cost him his place in the party he once helped define.Cheney leaves behind a complicated legacy — remembered both for his formidable influence during the Bush years and for his late-life defiance of Trump’s brand of politics.In death, Cheney remains a symbol of the divide that has come to define modern conservatism — a clash between the pursuit of power and the defence of principle. He stood for the old Republican order, rooted in national security and institutional strength, even as that world gave way to Trump’s populist movement. His final years captured that fault line: a party once shaped by discipline and ideology, now driven by loyalty and defiance.



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