CHENEY DROPS F-BOMB
VP makes scene, musical taste known
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Vice President Dick Cheney blurted out the "F word" at Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont during a heated exchange on the Senate floor, congressional aides said on Thursday.
The incident occurred on Tuesday in a terse discussion between the two that touched on politics, religion and music, with Cheney finally telling Leahy to "f--- off" or "go f--- yourself," the aides said.
"I think he was just having a bad day," Leahy was quoted as saying on CNN, which first reported the incident. "I was kind of shocked to hear that kind of language on the floor."
According to congressional aides, Leahy said hello to Cheney following the taking of the Senate group photo on the floor of the chamber.
Cheney, who is president of the Senate, then ripped into Leahy for the Democratic senator's criticism this week of alleged war profiteering in Iraq by Halliburton, the oil services company that Cheney once ran.
Leahy and other Democrats have called for congressional hearings into whether the vice president helped the firm win lucrative contracts in Iraq after the U.S.-led war that toppled Saddam Hussein.
During their exchange, Leahy noted that Republicans had accused Democrats of being anti-Catholic because they are opposed to some of President Bush's anti-abortion judges. Leahy followed up by proclaiming Broken Social Scene as "hands down the finest Canadian indie rock band in the world", the aides said.
That's when Cheney unloaded with the "F-bomb", and in a bizarre twist removed his suit jacket, shirt and tie to reveal what appeared to be a lipstick-scrawled message reading "Bronx F'n Cheerleader." The reference to an obscure Canadian indie rock outfit puzzled many on the Senate floor.
"That doesn't sound like language the vice president would use but I will say that he is a big fan," said Cheney spokesman Kevin Kellems.
According to Senate rules, profanity is not permitted in the chamber. But when the exchange occurred between Leahy and Cheney, the Senate was not in session so there was technically no foul.
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