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William (Bill) Clinton, at age 46, was the youngest
person to be elected PRESIDENT
of the United States since John F. KENNEDY
won ELECTION
in 1960 at the age of 43. But despite his youth, Clinton entered the
White House with considerable experience in executive government. At
the time of his election victory in 1992, he had already served for
nearly twelve years as governor of Arkansas, his native state. There,
too, Clinton had been distinguished for his youth as well as his
accomplishments. With his rise to the presidency, he was the first of
the generation born after World War II, the so-called baby boomers,
to achieve the country's highest office.
Early Years
Clinton was born William Jefferson Blythe in Hope,
Arkansas, on August 19, 1946. He was named for his father, William
Jefferson Blythe, who had been killed in an automobile accident three
months before Bill's birth. At the age of 2, he was sent to live with
his grandparents, who also resided in Hope, while his mother,
Virginia Blythe, studied nursing in New Orleans. When he was 4, his
mother married Roger Clinton, a car salesman, and they moved together
as a family to Hot Springs, Arkansas. The boy later took his
stepfather's last name.
Young Bill attended school in Little Rock. He was an
honors student, played the saxophone, and was popular with his
classmates. But life at home was not always pleasant. The elder
Clinton was an alcoholic, and when he had too much to drink, he could
be abusive. One day, when Bill was about 14, he stood up to his
stepfather. Although his stepfather kept drinking, the abuse stopped.
As Bill grew older, he came to understand his stepfather's problem
and so was able to forgive him before he died.
Youthful Ambition and Education
Clinton thought of becoming a doctor or a reporter or
even a musician. But after a fateful meeting with President John F.
Kennedy, while still in high school, he made up his mind to enter
politics. The meeting came about in 1963, when he was a delegate to
the American Legion Boys' Nation, a youth program in which students
learn about government. Clinton was part of a group that was invited
to the White House to meet the president. Kennedy, who only months
later was to be assassinated, shook hands with the young Clinton and
made a lasting impression on him.
After graduating from Hot Springs High School in 1964,
Clinton enrolled at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. In his
spare time he worked in the office of Senator J. William Fulbright of
Arkansas. Upon his graduation from Georgetown with a degree in
international affairs in 1968, he won a two-year Rhodes scholarship
at Oxford University in England. He returned to the United States in
1970 to study law at Yale University. In 1972 he took time off to
work for the presidential campaign of Democratic Senator George
McGovern of South Dakota, who was defeated by Richard M. NIXON.
The following year Clinton received his law degree.
Early Career and Marriage
Clinton served briefly as a staff lawyer for the U.S.
House of Representatives Judiciary Committee, before joining the
faculty of the University of Arkansas Law School in 1974. The same
year he tried, unsuccessfully, to launch his own political career,
running for CONGRESS
against a popular four-term REPUBLICAN.
Although Clinton lost, he received more votes than any other
DEMOCRATIC
candidate in the district had in 25 years. One reason Clinton did so
well was that many voters had turned against the Republicans that
year because of the Watergate scandal that forced President Nixon's
resignation.
In 1975, Clinton married Hillary Rodham, whom he had met
while attending the Yale Law School. Mrs. Clinton established her own
very successful law practice in Little Rock. The Clintons have one
child, a daughter named Chelsea.
Clinton's second try for political office was more
successful, winning him election as attorney general of Arkansas in
1976.
Governor of Arkansas
Two years later, Clinton was elected governor of
Arkansas. Then 32, he was the nation's youngest governor. Arkansas
voters, however, unhappy with tax increases that Clinton had imposed
on gasoline to pay for improving the state's highways, rejected his
bid for re-election in 1980. But in 1982, when he ran for governor
again, he won easily and went on to win re-election three more times.
The 1992 Presidential Campaign
In announcing his intention to seek the 1992 Democratic
presidential nomination, Clinton called for a jobs plan to lift the
country out of its economic recession, tax cuts for the middle class,
and a form of national health insurance. During the campaign, Clinton
was pursued by questions about his character. He was attacked by some
for evading military service and appearing to cover it up.
Nevertheless, he won enough delegates to assure his
swift nomination at the 1992 Democratic convention. For his
VICE-PRESIDENTIAL
running mate, Clinton chose 44-year-old Senator Albert (Al) Gore of
Tennessee.
Capitalizing on the poor state of the nation's economy,
Clinton won 370 ELECTORAL
votes to 168 for his Republican opponent, President George BUSH.
The entry into the campaign of a strong independent candidate, H.
Ross Perot, a Texas billionaire, made it a three-way race. No
candidate won a majority of the popular vote, but Clinton won a
plurality of 43 percent, compared to 38 percent for Bush and 19
percent for Perot. It was only the second time in 28 years that a
Democrat had won the presidency.
Clinton's Presidency - First Term
Domestic Affairs: Soon after taking office, Clinton
called for nearly $500 billion in tax increases and spending cuts.
Although Republicans and some conservative Democrats opposed his
plans to raise taxes, Congress finally gave the new president much of
what he had asked for. Clinton also won congressional approval for
the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Canada and
Mexico.
However, one of Clinton's top priorities--health
reform--met with stiff opposition. Critics complained that his
proposal would cost too much and lead to government interference in
the health care system. Clinton had to abandon the idea.
Meanwhile, Clinton devoted considerable time to dealing
with allegations of misconduct prior to his election as president.
One controversy stemmed from investments that he and First Lady
Hillary Rodham Clinton had made in the Whitewater Development
Corporation, an Arkansas real estate development firm. The other
concerned charges of sexual harassment made by a former Arkansas
government employee, Paula Jones. These issues contributed to the
Democratic Party's defeat in the 1994 midterm elections and helped
the Republicans gain control of Congress for the first time in 40
years.
But the efforts of congressional Republicans to balance
the budget while cutting back spending and reducing taxes led to a
shutdown of the federal government. This angered the American people,
many of whom sided with President Clinton, who had opposed the
Republican moves. Clinton emerged as the victor in this struggle, and
that success paved the way for his re-election in 1996.
Foreign Affaris: In international matters, Clinton
helped bring about an agreement between Israel and the Palestinian
Liberation Organization (PLO) concerning self-rule for Palestinians
in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. And in the Balkans, he sent 20,000
American troops to serve as part of an international peacekeeping
force.
Second Term
In the 1996 elections, Clinton won 49 percent of the
popular vote and 379 electoral votes. His opponents were the
Republican candidate, former U.S. senator Robert (Bob) Dole of
Kansas, and independent candidate H. Ross Perot.
First Year: 1997. On the domestic front, the president's
first major accomplishment of his second term was to reach an
agreement with the Republican Congress on how to achieve a balanced
budget. Despite tax cuts worth $95 billion, the balance was to be
achieved by trimming $263 billion from federal expenditures,
including $122 billion from Social Security over a five-year period.
Meanwhile, in addition to the Whitewater investigation
and the Paula Jones case, Clinton and Vice President Gore were
accused of questionable fund-raising activities for the 1996
campaign. Clinton insisted that they had acted "within the
letter of the law" and called for campaign finance reform.
In foreign affairs, the president persuaded Russian
president Boris N. Yeltsin to accept the expansion of NATO by
admitting three former Soviet Bloc countries as members.
Second Year: 1998. At the start of the year, President
Clinton set out to build on his previous accomplishments in the White
House by supporting the Social Security system, aiding education, and
reforming health care. But even before he could outline his goals in
his State of the Union message, his plans were disrupted by the
latest and most serious scandal to confront his presidency. This
controversy sprang from charges that he had had an improper
relationship with a former White House intern, Monica Lewinsky, and
then tried to cover up the relationship. Independent Counsel Kenneth
Starr, who had been investigating the Whitewater case, began looking
into whether Clinton had committed perjury by denying the affair with
Lewinsky in a sworn deposition in the Paula Jones case, and whether
he had tried to get Lewinsky to lie in her own sworn statement in the
Jones lawsuit.
At first Clinton denied the charges, and his supporters
accused Starr, a conservative Republican, of seeking to embarrass the
president, a Democrat. The public continued to give Clinton high
ratings in the polls. But then Lewinsky confirmed the affair in
testimony before Starr's grand jury, and Clinton was forced to admit
that he had not told the truth. Starr meanwhile sent a report to the
House of Representatives, contending that the president's alleged
actions of committing perjury and obstructing justice could be
grounds for impeachment.
Despite this personal turmoil, Clinton continued to play
an active role in foreign affairs. He threatened to launch air
strikes against Iraq until that country agreed to cooperate with
United Nations inspections of its weapons facilities. After terrorist
bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, Clinton ordered
retaliatory strikes at terrorist hideouts in Afghanistan and Sudan.
In the 1998 mid-term Congressional elections, Democrats
won more seats than was expected, indicating that a majority of
Americans continued to support the president. But on December 19,
Clinton was impeached by the House on charges of perjury and
obstruction of justice. As the case moved to the Senate for trial,
popular support for the president grew, making removal from office
appear unlikely.
Despite this turmoil, Clinton continued to play an
active role in foreign affairs. After terrorist bombings of U.S.
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, Clinton ordered retaliatory strikes
at terrorist hideouts in Afghanistan and Sudan. The president also
ordered the bombing of Iraq when that country refused to allow United
Nations inspection of its weapons facilities. In a peacekeeping role,
Clinton helped negotiate a Mideast pact between Israel and
Palestinian leaders. Israel agreed to withdraw its troops from land
claimed by the Palestinians in return for a promise to stop terrorism
against Israel.
Third Year: 1999. Clinton began the year facing an
impeachment trial in the Senate (which, like the House of
Representatives, was controlled by the Republican Party by a margin
of 55 to 45). But the president had an advantage in the Senate,
because a guilty verdict on impeachment charges requires a two-thirds
majority, or 67 senators--a dozen or so more than were likely to vote
against him.
On February 12, the president was easily acquitted on
both the impeachment and perjury charges, with his accusers failing
to get a majority on either vote. But soon after the Senate verdict,
the Lewinsky affair caused him further embarrassment. Clinton was
found to be in contempt of court and fined nearly $90,000 for giving
false testimony in the Paula Jones case in 1998. Thus he became the
first president to be cited for contempt.
In the midst of his impeachment trial, Clinton delivered
his State of the Union address. The president proposed using most of
the anticipated budget surplus to strengthen the social security
system and Medicare. But Republicans wanted to use much of the
surplus for a tax cut of nearly $800 billion, which the president
threatened to veto.
In international affairs, Clinton launched the biggest
military operation of his presidency on March 25, joining other NATO
countries in a massive bombing campaign against Yugoslavia. The aim
was to force Yugoslavian president Slobodan Miloevi to stop attacks
on ethnic Albanians in the province of Kosovo. After ten weeks of
bombing, Milosevic agreed to withdraw his forces from Kosovo. Clinton
claimed victory, and without losing a single soldier in combat.
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