|
|
Bill Clinton
Forty-second president of the
United States, born William Jefferson Blythe, on August 19,
1946, in Hope, Arkansas. His father, William Blythe, died in an
auto accident three months before he was born. He was adopted by
his stepfather, Roger Clinton. As a youth, he thrilled to John
F. Kennedy's promise, especially when he got the opportunity to
shake his idol’s hand in the Rose Garden in 1963.
Clinton attended Georgetown University and traveled to Oxford as
a Rhodes Scholar, receiving what would become a controversial
draft deferment during the Vietnam War. He graduated from Yale
Law School in 1973. Two years later, he married Hillary Rodham,
also a graduate of Yale Law.
A committed Democrat, Clinton served as the attorney general of
Arkansas from 1977 to 1979; he won the governor's seat in 1978.
Defeated for re-election in 1980, he went through a period of
soul-searching before making a comeback in 1982 and becoming
governor again. Clinton went on to reelection in 1984, 1986, and
1990, and was voted “most effective” by his fellow governors.
Clinton overcame serious charges involving alleged extramarital
affairs and questions about his avoiding the draft to win the
Democratic presidential nomination in 1992. He chose as his
running mate Senator Albert Gore, Jr. Though Clinton was accused
of “waffling” in his campaign speeches, he kept the pressure on
incumbent George Bush by focusing on the dire economic plight of
many Americans. He won the three-way presidential race—over Bush
and Reform Party candidate Ross Perot—with 43% of the popular
vote and 370 out of 525 electoral votes. Many saw his
inauguration as the passing of the torch to a new generation,
partially obscuring—but not for long—the fact that he faced an
enormous national debt and a country fragmented by social
strife.
During Clinton’s first term, the health of the American economy
improved and the U.S. became part of an international community
newly bent on the peaceful resolution of long-standing conflicts
from the Middle East to Northern Ireland. When the Republicans
wrested control of Congress in 1994, Clinton shifted noticeably
to the right in his politics, working with Republican leaders to
achieve a balanced budget, while abandoning earlier pledges such
as universal health care and gay and lesbian rights.
In 1996, Clinton won re-election over Republican Senator Bob
Dole. In the second term of the Clinton-Gore administration,
American prosperity continued, while international crises arose
in the Middle East and Yugoslavia. Even bigger problems at home
began in 1998. During the course of a sexual harassment lawsuit
filed against Clinton by Paula Jones, a former Arkansas state
employee, Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr accused Clinton of
lying to a federal grand jury about his relationship with former
White House intern Monica Lewinsky. Over the course of the next
year, Americans were bombarded with Starr’s findings, complete
with sordid details of the two-year affair, which Clinton
vigorously denied—until he was faced with DNA evidence and was
forced to admit his relationship with the then-21-year-old
LewinskyOn December 19, 1998, William Jefferson Clinton became
only the second President (after Andrew Johnson in 1868) to be
impeached when the Republican-controlled House of
Representatives, voting virtually along party lines, charged him
with perjury and obstruction of justice. In accordance with the
majority of public opinion, the Senate acquitted Clinton on
February 12, 1999, although he may face indictment upon leaving
office. Many will argue that Clinton’s mistakes in his personal
life have forever tarnished what would otherwise have been a
relatively successful Presidency.
|