William Jefferson "Bill" Clinton (born William Jefferson Blythe III on August 19 1946) was the 42nd President of the United States, serving from 1993 to 2001. He is also the founder and director of the William J. Clinton Foundation. Clinton served five terms as the Governor of Arkansas. His wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, is presently in her first term as the junior U.S. Senator from New York.
Presenting himself as a moderate and a member of the New Democrat wing of the Democratic Party, he headed the centrist Democratic Leadership Council in 1990 and 1991. He was elected President in 1992 and 1996 with Vice President Al Gore.
His domestic priorities as President included efforts to create a universal health care system, improve education, increase local police forces, restrict handgun sales, balance the federal budget, strengthen environmental regulations, improve race relations, and protect the jobs of workers during pregnancy or medical emergency. With approval from Congress, he raised income taxes in 1993. His most dramatic domestic move was the radical reform of the welfare system in 1996 in cooperation with Republicans who had taken control of Congress.
Internationally, his priorities included reducing trade barriers, support for the North American Free Trade Agreement, preventing nuclear proliferation, and mediating the Northern Ireland peace process and Israeli-Palestinian conflicts, and military intervention to end the Bosnian War and the Kosovo War. He engaged in air attacks on Iraq, most notably in Operation Desert Fox, and funded efforts to overthrow Saddam Hussein.
Clinton was the first baby boomer president and the first Democratic president to be re-elected since Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1944. Clinton was the third youngest president in history at 46, while Vice President Al Gore was 44. Clinton was one of only two presidents in American history to be impeached. The vote to impeach was along party lines in the Republican-dominated Congress He was acquitted by a vote of the United States Senate on February 12, 1999. Clinton remained popular with the public throughout his two terms as president, ending his presidential career with a 65% approval rating, the highest end-of-term approval rating of any president in the post-Eisenhower era.[http://abcnews.go.com/sections/politics/DailyNews/poll_clintonlegacy010117.html Historical Presidential Approval Ratings, abcnews.go.com, accessed February 27, 2006
Bill Clinton as a child went to St. John's Catholic School and Ramble Elementary School. While at Hot Springs High School, Clinton was an excellent student and a talented saxophonist. He considered dedicating his life to music, but a visit to the White House following his election as a Boys Nation Senator led him to pursue a career in politics. Clinton was a member of Youth Order of DeMolay but never actually became a Freemason.*
Clinton received a Bachelor of Science in Foreign Service (B.S.F.S.) degree from the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University in Washington D.C., where he became a brother of Alpha Phi Omega, worked for Senator J. William Fulbright, was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and won a Rhodes Scholarship to University College, Oxford. While at Oxford, he played rugby union as a lock, and later in life he played for the Little Rock Rugby club in Arkansas. There he also participated in the Vietnam War protest movement. After Oxford, Clinton obtained a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from Yale Law School in 1973. While at Yale, he began dating classmate Hillary Rodham. They married in 1975 and their only child, Chelsea, was born in 1980.
In 1978, Bill Clinton was first elected governor of the state of Arkansas, the youngest to be elected governor since 1938. His first term was fraught with difficulties, including an unpopular motor vehicle tax and popular anger over the escape of Cuban prisoners (from the Mariel boatlift) detained in Fort Chaffee in 1980.
In the 1980 election, Clinton was defeated in his bid for a second term by Republican challenger Frank D. White. As he once joked, he was the youngest ex-governor in the nation's history. But in 1982, Clinton won his old job back, and over the next decade he helped Arkansas transform its economy. He became a leading figure among the New Democrats, a branch of the Democratic Party that called for welfare reform, smaller government, and other ideas that reached out to Democrats and Republicans alike.
Clinton's approach mollified conservative criticism during his terms as governor. However, personal and business transactions made by the Clintons during this period became the basis of the Whitewater investigation, which dogged his later presidential Administration. After very extensive investigation over several years, no indictments were made against the Clintons related to the years in Arkansas.
Four years later, Clinton prepared for a run in 1992 against incumbent President George H. W. Bush. In the aftermath of the Persian Gulf War, Bush seemed unbeatable, and several potential Democratic candidates—notably New York Governor Mario Cuomo and U.S. Senator Al Gore—passed on what seemed to be a lost cause. Clinton won the nomination, beating out Senator Tom Harkin, California Governor Jerry Brown and former Senator Paul Tsongas.
Clinton chose Al Gore from neighboring Tennessee as his running mate, surprising pundits who had expected a geographically balanced ticket.
Many character issues were raised during the campaign, including allegations that Clinton had dodged the draft during the Vietnam War, and had used marijuana, which Clinton claimed he had pretended to smoke, but "didn't inhale". Allegations of extramarital affairs and shady business deals also arose. Clinton displayed the resiliency in the face of these partisan attacks that would later be pivotal in his presidency. As the candidate with the most money and the best-articulated campaign strategy — creating more jobs — Clinton was able to stay in the race the longest, fending off all rivals long before the Democratic convention.Campaign '96 Ads - CNN, accessed February 25, 2006
Clinton was victorious for several reasons. Polls showed discontent with Bush, with voters complaining he seemed out of touch with ordinary people and focused too much on foreign affairs. By contrast, the younger, telegenic Clinton projected an image as highly sympathetic to the concerns of ordinary families.
Additionally, Bush reneged on his promise ("Read My Lips: No New Taxes!") not to raise taxes. This hurt him among conservatives. Clinton capitalized on Bush's policy switch, repeatedly condemning the President for failing to keep his promise.
Finally, Bush's coalition was in disarray. Conservatives had been united by anti-communism, but with the end of the Cold War, old rivalries re-emerged. The Republican Convention of 1992 was dominated by evangelical Christians, alarming some moderate voters who thought the Republican Party had been taken over by religious conservatives.Mark Silk. Spiritual Politics: Religion and America Since World War 11. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1988, p. 160. * All this worked in Clinton's favor. Clinton could point to his moderate, 'New Democrat' record as governor of Arkansas. Liberal Democrats were impressed by Clinton's academic credentials, his 1960s-era protest record, and support for social causes such as a woman's right to choose. Many Democrats who had supported Ronald Reagan and Bush in previous elections switched their allegiance to the more moderate Clinton.
Clinton was the first Democrat to serve two full terms as President since Franklin D. Roosevelt. His election ended an era of Republican rule, including 12 consecutive years in the White House and 20 of the previous 24 years. That election also brought the Democrats full control of the political branches of the federal government, including both houses of Congress as well as the presidency, for the first time since 1980.
The reasons for this growth are debated, but Clinton supporters cite his 1993 tax increase, which they believe assisted in reducing the annual budget deficits every year of his tenure. These deficit reductions stimulated consumption and consumer spending and strengthened the dollar, which encouraged foreign investment in the United States economy. Alan Greenspan supported the 1993 tax increase, which was approved by Congress without a single Republican vote.Behind the Boom - Bob Woodward, The Washington Post, November 12, 2000 Critics of Clinton point to Alan Greenspan's strong chairmanship of the Federal Reserve, 1995 spending cuts and the Republican Party's Contract with America initiatives as alternative reasons for America's strong economic growth of the late 1990's. Critics also argue that the economic recovery had already begun before Bill Clinton took office and did not pick up momentum until 1995 and 1996, after the GOP took over Congress (despite the fact that GDP growth was higher in 1994 than in either 1995 or 1996). Many economists attribute massive growth to the dot-com bubble, which coincidentally occurred during Clinton's term, thus adding many new jobs which may not be directly attributed to policies of the Clinton Administration or Republican Congress.
Critics, however, said that the issue was one that should be experimented on in society as a whole, not in the military. The military's goal was not to be a "social Petri dish," but to defend the nation.
Two months later, after two years of Democratic party control under Clinton's leadership, the mid-term elections in 1994 proved disastrous for the Democrats. They lost control of both houses of Congress for the first time in 40 years.
The spotlight shifted to the Contract with America spearheaded by Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich. This initiative presented a blanket of traditional Republican proposals, plus several anti-corruption measures. Without a friendly legislative body, Clinton shifted from pushing new policy to blocking the Republican (GOP) agenda.
In 1996, the GOP passed a budget with significant spending cuts, thinking that Clinton could either sign the bill (a major political defeat) or veto it (resulting in a shutdown of most government services). GOP leaders believed that their recently energized supporters would stand with them, while the shutdown would be blamed on Clinton's veto of the spending bills. Clinton instead vetoed the bills and staged a media blitz, rallying his constituencies to blame the shutdown on the Republicans. The public agreed with Clinton's interpretation of the situation, and the Republicans suffered a major political defeat. The perception that the congressional Republicans were dangerous radicals stayed with the public for the remainder of the Clinton presidency, and Clinton repeatedly made skillful use of this perception to pass his initiatives while blocking any Republican agendas.
This proved to be a major political victory, and a vindication of his strategy of "triangulation." With the welfare reform system, Clinton was presented as a fair-minded, mainstream moderate.
Clinton signed into law the Brady Bill, which imposes a five-day waiting period on handgun purchases so that background checks can be done to help keep handguns away from criminals. President Clinton expanded the Earned Income Tax Credit, which benefits working class families with dependent children.
The Clinton Administration used the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights thirteen times and prevailed in the WTO thirteen times.Policing Intellectual Property Across Borders - audio 12:40-16:30, WBUR Boston, NPR news, aired July 25, 2005
In 1994, Clinton sent U.S. troops into Haiti to restore Jean-Bertrand Aristide as president, ending a period of intense violence. Aristide, who had been elected, had been ousted in a coup just seven months into his term in 1991. Aristide was a socialist who had often spoke against America. He continued with his anti-American rhetoric even after he was reinstated as the Haitian leader by American troops. Clinton also committed troops twice in the former-Yugoslavia to stop ethnic violence, most notably in Kosovo. In addition, Clinton launched military strikes on Iraq several times to punish violations of United Nations sanctions.
In November 1995, Clinton committed troops to the Balkans, saying the mission would be “precisely defined with clear realistic goals” that could be achieved in a “definite period of time". Clinton assured Americans the mission would take about one year. In October 1996, shortly before Clinton's reelection, the Clinton Administration denied any change in the plans to withdraw troops in December 1996. However, shortly after reelection, Clinton announced troops would stay longer. Troops ultimately stayed in Bosnia for nine years.Should Congress Investigate Misleading Prewar Intelligence? - Timothy Lynch, FOX, November 25, 2005
On February 17 1998, Clinton gave a speech signaling the danger of rogue nations providing weapons of mass destruction to terrorist organizations with global reach. Clinton specifically pointed to Saddam Hussein's Iraq.Text Of Clinton Statement On Iraq - transcript of Clinton speech on February 18, 1998, retrieved from CNN, February 25, 2006 In August 1998, UN weapons inspectors left Iraq, leading to Operation Desert Fox in December.
Some critics argue that the Clinton Administration's attacks in Kosovo, Serbia, Somalia, Bosnia, Sudan, and Afghanistan violated international law. The action was never sanctioned by the U.N. and strongly opposed by Russia and China. Clinton Is The World’s Leading Active War Criminal - Edward S. Herman, Z Magazine, December 1999 The other war criminal -- Bill Clinton - Alexander Cockburn, San Jose Mercury, June 3, 1999Clinton's dirty little war - Joseph Farah, WorldNetDaily, April 5, 1999
Clinton identified his major foreign policy failure as lack of response to the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. Along with the United Nations, the Clinton Administration initially did not publicly acknowledge that genocide was occurring. This delayed the mandatory response to the crisis which eventually killed one million people.Amanpour: Looking back at Rwanda genocide - Christiane Amanpour, CNN, April 6,2004 A report from the Organization for African Unity singled out the United Nations, Belgium, France and the United States for condemnation.Clinton Allowed Genocide, New Report Says - David Corn, AlterNet, July 25, 2000 In 1998, Clinton went to Africa where he said he "did not fully appreciate the depth and speed with which you were being engulfed by this unimaginable terror."Lying About Rwanda's Genocide - David Corn, The Nation, April 2, 2004 A report from the National Security Archive showed that the Clinton Administration had collected considerable amounts of information during the crisis and it was passed up to policymakers. In 2005, the former President apologized for his "personal failure" to stop the genocide.Clinton acknowledges he failed to stop Rwandan massacre CBC News - - July 23, 2005 However, the U.S. deployed 2,300 troops to Rwanda in an attempt to stop the genocide. The troops were withdrawn two months afterwards.
After initial successes such as the Oslo accords, the situation had quietly deteriorated, breaking down completely with the start of the Second Intifada. Clinton brought Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat together at Camp David. However, these negotiations proved unsuccessful. Critics charged Clinton with trying to "shoot the moon" to benefit his historical legacy, but instead making the situation worse with a botched negotiation. Supporters consider Clinton to have attempted to address new tensions from the recent outbreak of violence at its root causes, and that Clinton can hardly be blamed for a decades-old conflict. Some further argue that the perception that Arafat walked away from an offer that supposedly contained all of his previously stated demands enabled the US to pursue a more pro-Israel policy in later years.
| OFFICE > OFFICER | ||
| President | Bill Clinton | 1993-2001 |
| Vice President | Al Gore | 1993-2001 |
| State | Warren M. Christopher | 1993-1997 |
| Madeleine K. Albright | 1997-2001 | |
| Treasury | Lloyd Bentsen | 1993-1994 |
| Robert E. Rubin | 1995-1999 | |
| Lawrence H. Summers | 1999-2001 | |
| Defense | Les Aspin | 1993-1994 |
| William J. Perry | 1994-1997 | |
| William S. Cohen | 1997-2001 | |
| Justice | Janet Reno | 1993-2001 |
| Interior | Bruce Babbitt | 1993-2001 |
| Agriculture | Mike Espy | 1993-1994 |
| Daniel R. Glickman | 1994-2001 | |
| Commerce | Ronald H. Brown | 1993-1996 |
| Mickey Kantor | 1996-1997 | |
| William M. Daley | 1997-2000 | |
| Norman Y. Mineta | 2000-2001 | |
| Labor | Robert B. Reich | 1993-1997 |
| Alexis M. Herman | 1997-2001 | |
| Health and Human Services | Donna E. Shalala | 1993-2001 |
| Education | Richard Riley | 1993-2001 |
| Housing and Urban Development | Henry G. Cisneros | 1993-1997 |
| Andrew Cuomo | 1997-2001 | |
| Transportation | Federico F. Peña | 1993-1997 |
| Rodney E. Slater | 1997-2001 | |
| Energy | Hazel O'Leary | 1993-1997 |
| Federico F. Peña | 1997-1998 | |
| Bill Richardson | 1998-2001 | |
| Veterans Affairs | Jesse Brown | 1993-1997 |
| Togo D. West, Jr. | 1998-2000 | |
Clinton then appeared on national television on January 26 and stated: "Listen to me, I'm going to say this again. I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky." However, after it was revealed that investigators had obtained a semen-stained dress as well as testimony from Lewinsky, Clinton changed tactics and admitted that an improper relationship with Lewinsky had taken place: "Indeed I did have a relationship with Miss Lewinsky that was not appropriate. In fact, it was wrong. It constituted a critical lapse in judgment and a personal failure on my part for which I am solely and completely responsible."
He apologized to the nation, agreed to pay a $25,000 court fine, settled his sexual harassment lawsuit with Paula Jones for $850,000 and was temporarily disbarred from practicing law in Arkansas and before the U.S. Supreme Court. He was not tried for nor found guilty of perjury in a court.
Although the House Judiciary Committee hearings were perfunctory and ended in a straight party line vote, the debate on the floor of the House was lively. The two charges which were narrowly passed by the House were for perjury and obstruction of justice. The perjury charge arose from Clinton's testimony about his relationship with Lewinsky. The obstruction charge was based on his actions during the subsequent investigation of that testimony. Two other charges were voted down.
On February 12, 1999, the Senate concluded a 21-day trial with the vote on both counts falling short of the Constitutional requirement of a two-thirds majority to convict and remove an office holder. The final vote was generally along party lines, with all of the votes to convict being cast by Republicans. On the perjury charge, 55 senators voted to acquit, including 10 Republicans, and 45 voted to convict; on the obstruction charge the Senate voted 50-50.Clinton acquitted; president apologizes again - CNN, February 12, 1999 Clinton, like the only other President to be impeached, Andrew Johnson, served the remainder of his term.
Regarding Clinton's January 17, 1998, deposition where he was placed under oath, the judge wrote:
"Simply put, the president's deposition testimony regarding whether he had ever been alone with Ms. (Monica) Lewinsky was intentionally false and his statements regarding whether he had ever engaged in sexual relations with Ms. Lewinsky likewise were intentionally false . . ." *
Later—in January 2001, on the day before leaving office—Clinton agreed to a five year suspension of his Arkansas law license as part of an agreement with the independent counsel to end the investigation. Based on this suspension, Clinton was also automatically suspended from the United States Supreme Court bar, from which he chose to resign. *
Clinton's resignation was mostly symbolic, since he had never practiced before the Supreme Court and was not expected to in the future. The Paula Jones lawsuit was eventually settled out of court for $850,000.
Throughout his second term in office, President Clinton's policies of engagement and transparency with the People's Republic of China came under intense scrutiny by Congress and the media. It was learned that political appointees and fund-raisers of his (John Huang, Charlie Trie, James Riady, et al.) either had direct ties to Chinese intelligence, or were found to have been illegally donating money wired to them from Asian sources to Clinton's 1996 re-election campaign and legal defense trust. The issue was compounded when it was learned that a top Chinese arms merchant (Wang Jun) was allowed to attend a White House "coffee" meeting with Clinton and a number of his campaign donors in February 1996. These questions gained added urgency after Congress released the unanimous report known as the Cox Report in 1999, which documented that China had acquired intelligence about the United States' top military secrets. According to the report, MIRV, encryption, satellite, ICBM, and advanced nuclear weapon technology was stolen. Many members of Clinton's staff learned of the thefts as early as July 1995, but Clinton himself was not told until July 1997.
The Bill Clinton pardons controversy involved a grant of clemency to FALN bombers in 1999 and pardons to his brother Roger, tax-evading billionaire Marc Rich and others in 2001 (see List of people pardoned by Bill Clinton).
The House of Representatives later passed a resolution condemning Clinton’s pardon as an explicitly illegal action. Investigations were launched to find reasonable grounds for the clemency. However, “Congressional efforts to learn more about the FALN matter came to an end when Clinton invoked executive privilege to refuse subpoenas from congressional committee.” As the critics raged, the White House maintained that the pardon power is not subject to legislative deliberation. It is speculated that Clinton pardoned members of the FALN in exchange for funds for his wife's New York senatorial campaign in 2000.
Source:*
In June 2000, in an effort to raise money for Hillary Clinton's Senate campaign, Clinton detailed a friend and fund raiser from Chicago, James Levin, to serve as his direct liaison with a controversial Hollywood internet entrepreneur, Peter F Paul. Paul had expressed an interest, through Democratic National Committee Chairman Ed Rendell, in becoming a major contributor to Hillary Clinton's Senate campaign in order to engage Bill Clinton's post White House "rainmaking" services for his public company, Stan Lee Media. Paul was induced by Bill and Hillary Clinton, through Levin, to produce the Gala Hollywood Farewell Salute to President Clinton on August 12, 2000. Paul paid more than $1.2 million to produce the gala. Three days after the Gala, the Washington Post exposed Paul's felony convictions from his activities in the late 1970's. In 2003 Paul filed a landmark civil fraud and coercion suit against Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, James Levin and Gary Smith, which was upheld by the California Supreme Court to proceed to trial, and a trial date was set for March 27, 2007.
In March 1998, White House aide Kathleen Willey alleged that Clinton had sexually assaulted her. However, Clinton critic Linda Tripp held that Willey's allegations were false. Tripp told both Independent Counsel Ken Starr and reporter Michael Isikoff that she had seen Willey after Willey left Clinton's office that day, and that Willey was joyful from the encounter. She also testified that she helped Willey plot to seduce Clinton. In the end, the Robert Ray report deemed Willey an "unreliable witness" because of, "the differences between her deposition and Grand Jury statements, as well as her acknowledgment of false statements to the office of the Independent Counsel".Sidney Blumenthal The Clinton Wars. (2003). ISBN 0-37-412502-3 Also in 1998, Juanita Broaddrick alleged that Clinton had raped her in 1978; however, when subpoenaed by attorneys for Paula Jones, she responded with an affidavit that stated, "I do not know or have any information to offer regarding a non-consensual or unwelcome sexual advance made by Mr. Clinton."Sidney Blumenthal The Clinton Wars. (2003). ISBN 0-37-412502-3 She later offered up an affidavit that stated that Clinton had raped her, but her previous statements under oath damaged her claims. In addition, contemporaneous news paper stories documented that Clinton was not at the location at the time that she claimed he was.
Secretary of Agriculture Mike Espy was acquitted on each of 30 charges of illegally accepting gifts such as sports tickets, lodging, and transportation from companies regulated by his department in exchange for favors.A Harsh Verdict for Espy's Prosecutor - Bill Miller, Washington Post, December 5, 1998 HUD Secretary Henry Cisneros was indicted on 18 counts of conspiracy, giving false statements and obstruction of Justice. He pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor of lying to the FBI about the amount of money he gave his mistress, political fundraiser Linda Medlar. Medlar plead guilty to 28 counts related to the investigation. Both Medlar and Cisneros were pardoned by Clinton.
Clinton was criticized by those on the left for his practice of "co-opting" Republican policies, and "triangulating" himself. The triangulation practice caused the public to see Clinton on top of a triangle, putting himself above the Republicans and Democrats. The theory was that Clinton was, in his eyes, "doing the business of the American people", and not getting involved in partisan politics. He always stressed he was being bipartisan, but in the end many progressives concluded that he was simply a "Republican-lite". Conservative policies that he supported and passed while he was President were NAFTA, GATT, welfare reform, more crimes eligible for the death penalty, the Defense of Marriage Act, and deregulating the telecommunications industry. He dropped a nominee, Lani Guinier, from a key civil rights post because of her Black Power ideological views. Environmental advocacy groups faulted Clinton in many areas, such as failing to improve automobile fuel efficiency or reduce pesticide use in the United States.http://ewg.org/reports/sameasiteverwas/samepr.html Progressives like Ralph Nader and union leaders complained that Clinton's enthusiastic support of free trade cost the Democrats the Congress in 1994. They argued he alienated working class voters and the party's traditional liberal base, and these voters figured that neither the Republicans nor the Democrats cared very much for them.
While Clinton's job approval rating varied over the course of his first term, ranging from a low of 36 percent in 1993 to a high of 64% in 1993 and 1994Job Performance Ratings for President Clinton, accessed February 25, 2006, his job approval rating consistently ranged from the high 50s to the high 60s in his second term.Bill Clinton: Job Ratings - PollingReport.com Clinton's approval rating reached its highest point at 73% approval in the aftermath of the impeachment proceedings in 1998 and 1999.Poll: Clinton's approval rating up in wake of impeachment - CNN, December 20, 1998 A CNN/USA TODAY/Gallup pollPoll: Majority of Americans glad Clinton is leaving office - Keating Holland, CNN, January 10, 2001 conducted as he was leaving office, revealed deeply contradictory attitudes regarding Clinton. Although his approval rating at 68% was higher than that of any other departing President since polling began more than seven decades earlier, only 45% said they would miss him. While 55% thought he "would have something worthwhile to contribute and should remain active in public life", and 47% rated him as either outstanding or above average as President, 68% thought he would be remembered for his "involvement in personal scandal" rather than his accomplishments as President, and 58% answered "No" to the question "Do you generally think Bill Clinton is honest and trustworthy?" 47% of the respondents identified themselves as being Clinton supporters.
In May 2006, a CNN poll comparing President Clinton's job performance with that of successor President George W. Bush, a strong majority of respondents said President Clinton outperformed Bush on most issues. (The poll of 1,021 adult Americans was conducted May 5-7 by Opinion Research Corp. for CNN. Margin of sampling error was plus or minus 3 percentage points.)
When asked which man was more honest as President, 46% favored Clinton to 41% for Bush. Respondents favored Clinton by a greater than 2-to-1 margin when asked who did a better job at handling the economy (63% Clinton, 26% Bush) and solving the problems of ordinary Americans (62% Clinton, 25% Bush).
On foreign affairs, the margin was 56% to 32% in Clinton's favor; on taxes, it was 51% to 35% for Clinton; and on handling natural disasters, it was 51% to 30%, also favoring Clinton.
As the first Baby Boomer President, Clinton was the first President in a half century not shaped by World War II. With his sound-bite-ready dialogue and pioneering use of pop culture in his campaigning, such as playing his saxophone on The Arsenio Hall Show, Clinton was sometimes described as the "MTV President". Until his inauguration as President, he had earned substantially less money than his wife, and had the smallest net worth of any President in modern history, according to My Life, Clinton's autobiography. Clinton was popular among African-Americans and made improving race relations a major theme of his presidency.A Conversation With President Bill Clinton on Race in America Today - interview with Clinton, Center for American Progress, July 16, 2004
The Clintons were a political partnership unknown since Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. Many jokes implied that the First Lady was the real President of the United States.
Social conservatives were put off by the impression of Clinton having been a "hippie" during the late 1960s, his coming-of-age era. In the 1960s, however, Clinton might not have been viewed as such by many of those in the hippie subculture. Clinton avoided the draft with a student deferment while studying abroad during the Vietnam War. Clinton's marijuana experimentation, excused by Clinton's statement that he "didn't inhale", further tarnished his image with some voters. In terms of policy Clinton was to the right of most recent Democratic candidates for the presidency on many issues — he supported the death penalty, curfews, uniforms in public schools, and other measures opposed by youth rights supporters, and he expanded the War on Drugs greatly while in office.
Like other former American Presidents, Clinton has engaged in a career as a public speaker on a variety of issues (earning $875,000 in 2004, according to President Clinton's financial disclosure statements). In his speaking outside the country and in public forums, he continues to comment on aspects of contemporary politics. One notable theme is his advocacy of multilateral solutions to problems facing the world. Clinton's close relationship with the African American community has been highlighted in his post-presidential career with the opening of his personal office in the Harlem section of New York City. He assisted his wife, Hillary Clinton, in her campaign for office as Senator from New York.
In February 2004, Clinton (along with Mikhail Gorbachev and Sophia Loren) won a Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album for Children for narrating the Russian National Orchestra's album Peter and the Wolf/Wolf Tracks. Clinton won a second Grammy in February 2005, Best Spoken Word Album for My Life.
Clinton's autobiography, My Life, was released in June 2004.
On July 26 2004, Clinton spoke for the fifth consecutive time to the Democratic National Convention, using the opportunity to praise candidate John Kerry. Many Democrats believed that Clinton's speech was one of the best in Convention history. In it, he criticized President George W. Bush's depiction of Kerry, saying that "strength and wisdom are not opposing values."
On September 2 2004, Clinton had an episode of angina and was evaluated at Northern Westchester Hospital. It was determined that he had not suffered a coronary infarction, and he was sent home, returning the following day for angiography, which disclosed multiple vessel coronary artery disease. He was transferred to Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City, where he underwent a successful quadruple coronary artery bypass surgery on September 6 2004. The medical team claimed that, had he not had surgery, he would likely have suffered a massive heart attack within a few months. On March 10 2005, he underwent a follow-up surgery to remove scar tissue and fluid from his left chest cavity, a result of his open-heart surgery.
He dedicated his presidential library, which is the largest in the nation, the William J. Clinton Presidential Center, in Little Rock, Arkansas on November 18 2004. Under rainy skies, Clinton received words of praise from former presidents Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush, as well as from the current President George W. Bush. He was also treated to a musical rendition from Bono and The Edge from U2, who expressed their gratitude at Clinton's efforts to resolve the Northern Ireland conflict during his presidency.
On November 22 2004, New York Republican Governor George Pataki named Clinton and the other living former Presidents (Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, and George H. W. Bush) as honorary members of the board rebuilding the World Trade Center.
In 2005, the University of Arkansas System opened the Clinton School of Public Service on the grounds of the Clinton Presidential Center.
On December 9 2005, speaking at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Montreal, Clinton publicly criticized the Bush Administration for its handling of emissions control.
While in Sydney to attend a Global Business Forum, Clinton signed a memorandum of understanding on behalf of his presidential foundation with the Australian government to promote HIV/AIDS programs in the Asia-Pacific region.
On May 3, 2006, Clinton announced through the William J. Clinton Foundation an agreement by major soft drink manufacturers to stop selling sugared sodas and juice drinks in public primary and secondary schools.
On March 5, 2006, he received an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Pace University. He became the first recipient of the Pace University President's Centennial Award. Following reception of the honorary degree, he spoke to the students, faculty, alumni and staff of Pace, officially kicking off the centennial anniversary of the university. Also in 2006, Clinton was awarded the J. William Fulbright Prize for International Understanding.
On January 3 2005, President George W. Bush named Clinton and George H. W. Bush to lead a nationwide campaign to help the victims of the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake. On February 1 2005, he was selected by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to head the United Nations earthquake and tsunami relief and reconstruction effort. Five days later, he appeared with Bush on the Super Bowl XXXIX pre-game show on Fox in support of their bipartisan effort to raise money for relief of the disaster through the USA Freedom Corps, an action which Bush described as "transcending politics." Thirteen days later, they traveled to the affected areas to see the relief efforts.
On August 31 2005, following the devastation of the Gulf Coast by Hurricane Katrina, Clinton again teamed with George H. W. Bush to coordinate private relief donations, in a campaign similar to their earlier one in response to the Indian Ocean tsunami. Clinton was highly critical of the federal government's response to the hurricane, saying that the government "failed" the people affected, and that an investigation into the response was warranted. Clinton: Government 'failed' people - CNN, September 5, 2005
Bill Clinton | Presidents of the United States | Governors of Arkansas | U.S. State Attorneys General | Democratic Party (United States) presidential nominees | Impeached United States officials | Pro-choice politicians | Same-sex marriage opposition | Sex scandals | 1996 campaign finance scandal | Members of the Council on Foreign Relations | Breast cancer activists | Members of the Trilateral Commission | American debaters | American legal academics | Disbarred American lawyers | American memoirists | The West Wing actors | American Rhodes scholars | Yale Law School graduates | Former students of University College, Oxford | Georgetown University alumni | People associated with the University of Arkansas | Baptists from the United States | American born-again Christians | Alpha Phi Omega brothers | Time magazine Persons of the Year | Karlspreis laureates | Silver Buffalo awardees | Junior Chamber International | Grammy Award winners | Boys & Girls Club alumni | Irish-American politicians | Scots-Irish Americans | People from New York | People from Hot Springs, Arkansas | Hillary Rodham Clinton | 1946 births | Living people
ቢል ክሊንተን | بيل كلينتون | বিল ক্লিনটন | Bill Clinton | Біл Клінтан | Bill Clinton | Бил Клинтън | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | William J. Clinton | Bill Clinton | بیل کلینتون | Bill Clinton | William J. Clinton | William Jefferson Clinton | 빌 클린턴 | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | ביל קלינטון | Gulielmus Clinton | bil.klenton. | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | ビル・クリントン | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Клинтон, Уильям Джефферсон | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Бил Клинтон | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | บิล คลินตัน | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | Bill Clinton | 比尔·克林顿
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