For better or worse, Dick Cheney redefined the role of the modern Vice President. By creating his own executive branch inside the Bush White House, he wielded power and influence that often usurped the President he served. Today Joe Biden inherits that office and himself has extraordinary power and influence, but he achieves it in a wholly different way; by partnering rather than competing with his President. His influence in the area of US foreign policy is profound and might be felt in the President's Af/Pack speech tomorrow night. The idea of Joe Biden as "the second most powerful Vice President in history" is the cover story of this week's New York Times Magazine by contributing editor James Traub.
My conversation with James Traub: