A Cheney protest at Y.?
April invitation to vice president may stir up some controversy
The Board of Trustees clearly was delighted to land a sitting vice president a year after President Bush was unable to accept their invitation to speak in April 2006, and the three-man First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, acting in their roles as chairman and vice chairmen of the board, invited Cheney.
"We are honored to have the vice president speak," BYU spokeswoman Carri Jenkins said.
Not everyone on campus agrees.
"There is controversy, and it's good," said Ted Lyon, a professor of Spanish and Portuguese. "BYU has been known as a hotbed of political rest. I hope we have a little unrest, too."
Political science professor Darren Hawkins said it's possible the visit of an unpopular vice president in the midst of the Iraq war and in the wake of the Scooter Libby trial might even spark a protest by BYU students, a rarity on the conservative campus.
"He may be the most unpopular vice president in history and he may be the most unpopular person in America right now, so, yes, where else could he go?" Hawkins said. "It doesn't surprise me the White House called back and wondered if BYU would take him. I seriously doubt he'd be welcome at a lot of other universities."
The president of the BYU College Democrats said club members expressed a number of concerns about Cheney's visit.
"I have heard students say they are concerned that commencement speakers in the past were LDS religious figures," Diane Bailey said. "This would be a break from that tradition. They also are concerned about political neutrality. Club members have said they would hope BYU would invite a Democrat of similar caliber and celebrity status in the future as a balance to someone as conservative as Vice President Dick Cheney."
Lyon said the invitation "raised a big stink" among students who don't think Cheney should have been invited, and he expects student protests. He won't join them.
"I'm glad he's coming," Lyon said. "The idea is to let him come and speak. I'm going to honor the office."
But Lyon also said BYU should consider balancing the appearance the way Utah Valley State College invited conservative talk show host Sean Hannity to speak when controversy erupted over the planned appearance of liberal filmmaker Michael Moore.
"I don't think we are a fair campus," Lyon said. "I'll say that and I don't mind saying that. Do you think we would invite Bill Clinton? No, I don't think we would. We're the campus that projects closeness to Republicans, and so we only invite Republicans.




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