Dick
Cheney
was
elected
vice-president
of the
United
States
in
2000,
as the
running
mate
of
George
W.
Bush.
Cheney
grew
up in
Wyoming,
where
he
also
earned
his
college
degrees.
A
staff
member
during
the
administration
of
Richard
Nixon,
Cheney
became
the
White
House
chief
of
staff
under
Gerald
Ford.
Cheney
was
elected
to the
House
of
Representatives
from
Wyoming
in
1978
and
quickly
rose
in the
ranks
of the
Republican
party;
he
also
served
as
vice
chairman
of the
committee
investigating
the
Iran-Contra
scandal
during
the
presidency
of
Ronald
Reagan.
Under
President
George
Bush
the
elder,
Cheney
served
as
Secretary
of
Defense
and
played
a
major
role
in the
Persian
Gulf
War.
Cheney
then
worked
in the
oil
industry
as a
top
executive
for
the
Halliburton
Company
before
his
return
to
government
in
2000.
His
ties
to
Halliburton
became
a
source
of
controversy
in
2003,
when
the
company
received
a
major
contract
to
help
rebuild
Iraq
after
the
U.S.
invasion
there.
Bush
and
Cheney
were
re-elected
in
2004,
narrowly
beating
a
Democratic
ticket
of
John
Kerry
and
John
Edwards.
Cheney
has
been
criticized
for
waiting
a day
before
disclosing
a
hunting
mishap
on
Saturday,
in
which
he
shot
his
78-year-old
hunting
companion,
Harry
Whittington,
in the
neck,
chest,
and
face.