Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel is thinking about running for president. But if you want to talk Republican vice-presidential prospects, you could do worse than to suggest his name. For he's positioning himself as the 2008 version of his Connecticut colleague, Joe Lieberman.
In 1998, impeachment talk dominated Washington, and Lieberman criticized his fellow Democrat, then-President Bill Clinton, in a Senate speech. "I believe that the harm the president's actions have caused extend beyond the political arena," Lieberman said. "I am afraid that the misconduct the president has admitted may be reinforcing one of the worst messages being delivered by our popular culture, which is that values are fungible. And I am concerned that his misconduct may help to blur some of the most important bright lines of right and wrong in our society."
Now, once again, a president faces severe criticism from a member of his party. Here's Hagel on Bush, as quoted by the Associated Press: "Any president who says, I don't care, or I will not respond to what the people of this country are saying about Iraq or anything else, or I don't care what the Congress does, I am going to proceed - if a president really believes that, then there are - what I was pointing out, there are ways to deal with that."
If Bush's approval ratings keep sliding, and if Hagel loses out to a more conservative Republican in the primaries, the eventual nominee might be wise to add the Nebraskan to his ticket. For this would show voters that while he embraces his party's values, he distances himself from that party's president who's faced significant opposition.