Liz Cheney
Author of Oath and Honor: A Memoir and a Warning
About the Author
Image credit: Official portrait, 2018
Works by Liz Cheney
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Cheney, Liz
- Other names
- Cheney, Elizabeth
Cheney Perry, Elizabeth
Cheney, Elizabeth Lynne - Birthdate
- 1966-07-28
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Colorado College (BA)
University of Chicago Law School (JD) - Occupations
- attorney
- Organizations
- U.S. State Department
Keep America Safe (co-founder) - Awards and honors
- Forbes 50 Over 50
Time 100
John F. Kennedy Library Foundation Profile in Courage - Relationships
- Cheney, Dick (father)
Cheney, Lynne (mother)
Perry, Phillip (husband) - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Madison, Wisconsin, USA
- Places of residence
- Wyoming, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Discussions
Tale of Three 2020's GOP Women in Pro and Con (May 2024)
Reviews
I swore I was through reading books about Donald Trump’s efforts to overthrow the government. But when my turn came up for the audio book at my library, I decided to listen to it. I watched every minute of the January 6th hearing that Mississippi congressman Bennie Thompson chaired. Liz Cheney was the ranking minority member. She narrated the book. One of the real bonuses of this book is the use of actual audio from the hearing sessions when she was talking about them. That really helped show more my understanding of the procedures even though I had watched them on television. I really wish every American would read Cheney’s book, but, unfortunately, those who need it the most—Republicans who refused to watch the proceedings—probably would never give a book like this the time of day. I have a good friend who happens to live in Bennie Thompson’s district in Mississippi. When he last visited, I mentioned how impressed I was with the way the congressman ran the January 6th Commission hearing sessions. My friend’s response was, “I didn’t see it.” It’s too bad that most Republicans probably feel this way. One of the most jarring things Liz Cheney said was that she never thought she would see the day when the Republican Party couldn’t be counted on the protect our republic, but that was the case now. This coming from one of the highest ranking Republicans in Congress….at least until she was primaried in the next election. If you are reading this review and you’re thinking, “I don’t want to read another book about Trump’s antics,” at least read (or, better yet listen to) the Epilogue of “Oath and Honor.” That chapter, even if you saw the hearings, is well worth the few minutes it takes to read. Liz Cheney sacrificed her political career to do what she did on the Jan. 6 commission. History will be much kinder to her than it will be to Donald Trump. show less
The biggest yikes for this one. It should have stood as a sobering historical account and a call to action for holding individuals accountable, politically and criminally. Unfortunately, I’m writing this just two days before Trump’s second inauguration, making the warnings in this book feel like a chilling prophecy instead. This memoir is incredibly well done, packed with personal and professional insights that left me in awe of Liz Cheney’s courage and fortitude. She details the show more events leading up to January 6, 2021, and the fallout that followed with clarity and urgency. I strongly recommend experiencing this as an audiobook, as it includes crucial, terrifying audio clips from January 6 alongside damning testimony from the investigation. The epilogue devastatingly lays out how freedom erodes under unchecked authoritarianism heading into the 2024 election. Listening to it now, it’s not a warning, it’s reality. As a Canadian, I feel a degree of removal, but it’s impossible to ignore how deeply America’s political actions impact the world, including us. This book is damning and upsetting. It’s motivating, but it also left me in a bit of despair knowing that the people who need its message most aren’t interested in hearing it. It’s a tough but crucial listen. show less
Liz Cheney and I are never going to see eye-to-eye on some issues. She is a Reagan Republican, setting him up next to Lincoln, in fact, whereas I think Reagan was one of the worst presidents we've had.
We easily agree on one thing, though: ours is a government of laws, not men. On this point we clearly separate from Donald Trump, especially the Trump we saw on January 6, 2021.
This book is about that day. Cheney tells us what went on in her life, as a Representative from Wyoming, in the months show more preceding January 6, on that day, and in the months and few years since then.
After the election of 2020, Cheney became aware of Trump's allegations that the election "had been stolen", that in fact it was a landslide victory for him. Investigation after investigation by states revealed that there had been no stolen election, no conspiracy. Trump's lawyers filed 63 suits, and won just one of them, and the results of that one were immaterial.
It became clear that Trump would not let up and he started to tweet messages about a "wild time" that would be had on January 6. January 6 was the day that the Congress officially counts the electoral votes, which have been certified by the states. There is no mystery about the day; the results are already known. It is a ministerial process. However, Trump, backed by a few (but not most) of his lawyers, suggested that there was a way to turn it around. He said the Vice-President could, acting as President of the Senate, refuse to count some of the votes, saying they are in question. When in fact none were in question.
The ploy was a last-ditch effort, after Trump's attempts to get some states to overturn their results, to keep the presidency.
We know how that went, but we don't necessarily know what it was like inside the Capital at the time. Cheney's report reveals that the danger was horrifyingly near, that a few prominent Republicans continued to back Trump's position, aiding the attackers by delaying the count, among other things. It was clear than and even clearer later that Trump was attempting a coup. This was an insurrection.
After January 6 many steps were taken to sort out what had happened. Several Republicans and right-wing media proclaimed that the violence was exaggerated, that it was just another day, ignoring the deaths and destruction in front of them. Liz Cheney was asked by speaker Pelosi to join the House Select Committee to investigate the events on January 6. The committee and its staff worked tirelessly and rapidly to interview everyone involved, to the extent possible, before holding hearings. Those hearings concluded with a report damning Trump in particular as the leader of the violent action on that day.
Throughout the book, Cheney makes clear her allegiance to her oath to the country, not to her party or to any one person. When speaking to a crowd in Wyoming in 2022, she said:
"I will never put party above my duty to the country. I will never put party above my duty to the Constitution. I swore an oath under God and I will abide by that oath. I won't say something that I know is wrong simply to earn the votes of people, to earn political support. So I'm asking for your vote, and I'm asking you to understand that I will never violate my oath of office. And if you're looking for somebody who will, then you need to vote for somebody else on this stage because I won't. I will always put my oath first."
Needless to say, she lost her seat in the midterm election. She was also demoted in the House by lead Republicans who don't see the oath the same way she does.
It's an important book and it leaves me wondering: how in hell is Trump still out of jail? show less
We easily agree on one thing, though: ours is a government of laws, not men. On this point we clearly separate from Donald Trump, especially the Trump we saw on January 6, 2021.
This book is about that day. Cheney tells us what went on in her life, as a Representative from Wyoming, in the months show more preceding January 6, on that day, and in the months and few years since then.
After the election of 2020, Cheney became aware of Trump's allegations that the election "had been stolen", that in fact it was a landslide victory for him. Investigation after investigation by states revealed that there had been no stolen election, no conspiracy. Trump's lawyers filed 63 suits, and won just one of them, and the results of that one were immaterial.
It became clear that Trump would not let up and he started to tweet messages about a "wild time" that would be had on January 6. January 6 was the day that the Congress officially counts the electoral votes, which have been certified by the states. There is no mystery about the day; the results are already known. It is a ministerial process. However, Trump, backed by a few (but not most) of his lawyers, suggested that there was a way to turn it around. He said the Vice-President could, acting as President of the Senate, refuse to count some of the votes, saying they are in question. When in fact none were in question.
The ploy was a last-ditch effort, after Trump's attempts to get some states to overturn their results, to keep the presidency.
We know how that went, but we don't necessarily know what it was like inside the Capital at the time. Cheney's report reveals that the danger was horrifyingly near, that a few prominent Republicans continued to back Trump's position, aiding the attackers by delaying the count, among other things. It was clear than and even clearer later that Trump was attempting a coup. This was an insurrection.
After January 6 many steps were taken to sort out what had happened. Several Republicans and right-wing media proclaimed that the violence was exaggerated, that it was just another day, ignoring the deaths and destruction in front of them. Liz Cheney was asked by speaker Pelosi to join the House Select Committee to investigate the events on January 6. The committee and its staff worked tirelessly and rapidly to interview everyone involved, to the extent possible, before holding hearings. Those hearings concluded with a report damning Trump in particular as the leader of the violent action on that day.
Throughout the book, Cheney makes clear her allegiance to her oath to the country, not to her party or to any one person. When speaking to a crowd in Wyoming in 2022, she said:
"I will never put party above my duty to the country. I will never put party above my duty to the Constitution. I swore an oath under God and I will abide by that oath. I won't say something that I know is wrong simply to earn the votes of people, to earn political support. So I'm asking for your vote, and I'm asking you to understand that I will never violate my oath of office. And if you're looking for somebody who will, then you need to vote for somebody else on this stage because I won't. I will always put my oath first."
Needless to say, she lost her seat in the midterm election. She was also demoted in the House by lead Republicans who don't see the oath the same way she does.
It's an important book and it leaves me wondering: how in hell is Trump still out of jail? show less
This is a depressing book. It breaks little new ground but the father/daughter team of authors report in detail the downward slope of the history of the United States under the Obama administration. Each of the events or periods related are recalled with ease but, by listing them in chronological order, the authors force us to relive them in a continuous stream. No doubt that is their intent. There have been few interludes in the drum-beat of equivocation, disengagement, superciliousness, show more and just outright unawareness by our government. It seems as if this administration handles our foreign affairs as if it is taking place in an alternate reality while it deals with the realities of more government to deal with its ever increasing reach into the life of our nation. When a president can tell us with a straight face that climate change is a more significant issue than the safety of the nation from foreign adversaries, there is a huge disconnect between that president and the citizens of the country over which he reigns. And reign he does with little or no deference of the other parts of the government. show less
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- Rating
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- ISBNs
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