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Presidency of Bill Clinton

Bill Clinton's tenure as the 42nd president of the United States began with his first inauguration on January 20, 1993, and ended on January 20, 2001. Clinton, a Democrat from Arkansas, took office following his victory over Republican incumbent president George H. W. Bush and independent businessman Ross Perot in the 1992 presidential election. Four years later, in the 1996 presidential election, he defeated Republican nominee Bob Dole and Perot again (then as the nominee of the Reform Party), to win re-election. Clinton was limited to two terms and was succeeded by Republican George W. Bush, who won the 2000 presidential election.

Presidency of Bill Clinton
January 20, 1993 – January 20, 2001
CabinetSee list
PartyDemocratic
Election
SeatWhite House
Archived website
Library website

The nation experienced an extended period of economic prosperity during the Clinton presidency. While the economy remained strong, his presidency oscillated dramatically from high to low and back again, which historian Gil Troy characterized in six Acts. Act I in early 1993 was "Bush League" with amateurish distractions. By mid-1993 Clinton had recovered to Act II, passing a balanced budget and the NAFTA trade deal. Act III, 1994, saw the Republicans mobilizing under Newt Gingrich, defeating his healthcare reforms, and taking control of the House of Representatives for the first time in forty years. 1995 to 1997 saw the comeback in Act IV, with a triumphant reelection landslide. However, Act V, the Lewinsky scandal and impeachment made 1998 a lost year. Clinton concluded happily with Act VI by deregulating the banking system in 1999.[1]

Months into his first term, he signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, which raised taxes and set the stage for future budget surpluses. He signed the bipartisan Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act and won ratification of the North American Free Trade Agreement, despite opposition from trade unions and environmentalists. Clinton's most ambitious legislative initiative, a plan to provide universal health care, faltered it never had majority support in Congress due to the Republican Revolution. In the 1994 elections, the Republican Revolution swept the country. Clinton vetoed many of the Republican policies such as abortion restrictions. He assembled a bipartisan coalition to pass welfare reform and successfully expanded health insurance for children.

In foreign policy, Clinton initiated a bombing campaign in the Balkans, which led to the creation of a United Nations protectorate in Kosovo. He played a major role of the expansion of NATO into former Eastern Bloc countries and remained on positive terms with Russian President Boris Yeltsin. During his second term, Clinton presided over the deregulation of the financial and telecommunications industry. Clinton's second term also saw the first federal budget surpluses since the 1960s. Clinton's budget surplus was reversed by the overspending of George W. Bush, which led to the current $33 trillion in national debt. The ratio of debt held by the public to GDP, also fell from 47.8% in 1993 to 33.6% by 2000. His impeachment in 1998 arose after he denied claims of having an affair with a White House intern, Monica Lewinsky under oath. He was acquitted of all charges by the Senate. He appointed Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Clinton left office with high approval ratings, though his preferred successor, Vice President Al Gore, was narrowly defeated in the Electoral College by George W. Bush in the 2000 presidential election, in spite of Gore winning the popular vote. Historians and political scientists have tended to rank Clinton as an above-average president.[2]

1992 election edit

 
1992 Electoral College vote results
 
Outgoing President George H. W. Bush and President-elect Bill Clinton on November 18, 1992

President George H. W. Bush's popularity in the aftermath of the successful 1991 Gulf War convinced many prominent Democrats to sit out the 1992 presidential election. With party leaders like Mario Cuomo and Dick Gephardt staying out of the running, the 1992 Democratic primary field consisted of relatively unknown candidates. Among those who sought the Democratic nomination were former Senator Paul Tsongas of Massachusetts, former Governor Jerry Brown of California, and Bill Clinton, who had served as the Governor of Arkansas since 1983. Clinton emerged as the front-runner for the nomination after the first set of primaries in February 1992. A founding member of the centrist Democratic Leadership Council, Clinton overcame opposition from more liberal Democrats like Brown and clinched the Democratic nomination in April 1992.[3]

Bush defeated a challenge from conservative commentator Pat Buchanan to win his party's nomination. Meanwhile, independent candidate Ross Perot, a billionaire businessman from Texas, emerged as a major factor in the race. Perot ran a populist campaign that focused on voters disillusioned with both parties, and he emphasized his opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement and his desire to balance the federal budget. Polls taken in early June 1992 showed Bush leading the race, followed by Perot and then Clinton. From July to September, Perot temporarily dropped out of the race, causing severe damage to his candidacy. At the 1992 Democratic National Convention, Clinton selected Senator Al Gore of Tennessee as his running mate, and the successful convention helped unify Democrats behind Clinton. While the 1992 Republican National Convention placed a heavy emphasis on social issues, Clinton's campaign focused on the state of the economy, which was still emerging from the early 1990s recession.[4]

On election day, Clinton won 43% of the popular vote and a wide majority in the Electoral College. Bush won 37.4% of the popular vote, while Perot took 18.9%, the strongest showing by a third party or independent presidential candidate since the 1912 election. Later studies showed that Perot drew his voters roughly equally from Clinton and Bush. Clinton's victory included a sweep of the Northeastern United States, and he also won several states in the Midwest, the West, and the South.[5] By far voters' disappointment with the economy was the major favor in voting against the incumbent, with abortion a lesser factor.[6] In the concurrent congressional elections, Democrats retained control of both houses of Congress.[7]

Clinton used his inaugural address to deal with his uncertain mandate from the voters and lack of national experience. He drew heavily upon his lifelong study of the Protestant Bible, his education at Catholic Georgetown University, and the inaugural addresses of Ronald Reagan, Richard Nixon, John Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, and Woodrow Wilson.[8]

Administration edit

 
President Bill Clinton and his cabinet in 1993.
The Clinton cabinet
OfficeNameTerm
PresidentBill Clinton1993–2001
Vice PresidentAl Gore1993–2001
Secretary of StateWarren Christopher1993–1997
Madeleine Albright1997–2001
Secretary of the TreasuryLloyd Bentsen1993–1994
Robert Rubin1995–1999
Lawrence Summers1999–2001
Secretary of DefenseLes Aspin1993–1994
William Perry1994–1997
William Cohen1997–2001
Attorney GeneralJanet Reno1993–2001
Secretary of the InteriorBruce Babbitt1993–2001
Secretary of AgricultureMike Espy1993–1994
Dan Glickman1995–2001
Secretary of CommerceRon Brown1993–1996
Mickey Kantor1996–1997
William M. Daley1997–2000
Norman Mineta2000–2001
Secretary of LaborRobert Reich1993–1997
Alexis Herman1997–2001
Secretary of Health and
Human Services
Donna Shalala1993–2001
Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development
Henry Cisneros1993–1997
Andrew Cuomo1997–2001
Secretary of TransportationFederico Peña1993–1997
Rodney Slater1997–2001
Secretary of EnergyHazel O'Leary1993–1997
Federico Peña1997–1998
Bill Richardson1998–2001
Secretary of EducationRichard Riley1993–2001
Secretary of Veterans AffairsJesse Brown1993–1997
Togo West1998–2000
Hershel Gober (acting)2000–2001
Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency
Carol Browner1993–2001
Director of the Office of
Management and Budget
Leon Panetta1993–1994
Alice Rivlin1994–1996
Franklin Raines1996–1998
Jack Lew1998–2001
Director of Central IntelligenceJames Woolsey1993–1995
John M. Deutch*1995–1996
George Tenet1996–2001
United States Trade RepresentativeMickey Kantor1993–1996
Charlene Barshefsky1996–2001
Ambassador to the United NationsMadeleine Albright1993–1997
Bill Richardson1997–1998
Richard Holbrooke1999–2001
Chair of the
Council of Economic Advisers
Laura Tyson1993–1995
Joseph Stiglitz1995–1997
Janet Yellen1997–1999
Martin N. Baily1999–2001
Administrator of the
Small Business Administration
Erskine Bowles1993–1994
Philip Lader**1994–1997
Aida Álvarez1997–2001
Director of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency
James Witt***1993–2001
Director of the Office of
National Drug Control Policy
Lee Brown1993–1996
Barry McCaffrey1996–2001
Chief of StaffMack McLarty1993–1994
Leon Panetta1994–1997
Erskine Bowles1997–1998
John Podesta1998–2001
*Elevated to cabinet-level in May 1995
**Elevated to cabinet-level in October 1994
***Elevated to cabinet-level in February 1996

Mack McLarty, a long-time friend of Clinton who had led a successful business career and had served as the chairman of the Arkansas Democratic Party, became Clinton's first chief of staff.[9] Clinton convinced Lloyd Bentsen, a longtime Senator from Texas and the 1988 Democratic vice presidential nominee, to serve as his first Secretary of the Treasury.[10] At the start of Clinton's first term, Bentsen, OMB Director Leon Panetta, Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, and policy coordinator Robert Rubin were Clinton's top economic advisers.[11] Clinton's first term foreign policy team was led by National Security Advisor Anthony Lake and Secretary of State Warren Christopher, both of whom had served in the Carter administration.[12] Vice President Gore and First Lady Hillary Clinton emerged as two of the most influential figures of the Clinton administration, and Clinton solicited their opinions on a wide range of issues.[13]

Clinton decided to appoint the first female Attorney General, settling on little-known corporate lawyer Zoë Baird. In what became known as the Nannygate matter, the Senate Judiciary Committee revealed that Baird had hired a Peruvian couple, both undocumented immigrants, to work in her home.[14] Baird withdrew her nomination and Clinton next chose Kimba Wood, who was quickly forced to withdraw due to somewhat similar problems.[15] Janet Reno, a Florida state's attorney, was nominated for Attorney General a few weeks later, and she won confirmation in March 1993.[16] After experiencing difficulty with these nominations, as well as that of Lani Guinier, Clinton brought in David Gergen, who had previously served in Republican administrations, to serve as Counselor to the President.[17] Secretary of Defense Les Aspin resigned in the aftermath of the Battle of Mogadishu and was succeeded by William Perry.[18] Bentsen and McLarty also left office in 1994, and they were replaced by Rubin and Panetta, respectively.[19]

After Clinton's re-election, Panetta stepped down and was replaced by former deputy chief of staff Erskine Bowles.[20] Madeleine Albright became the first female Secretary of State, Sandy Berger succeeded Lake as National Security Adviser, and former Republican Senator William Cohen became the Secretary of Defense.[21] According to reporter John Harris, Berger's close rapport with Clinton made him the leading foreign policy figure of Clinton's second term, as well as the most influential National Security Advisor since Henry Kissinger.[22] John Podesta assumed the position of Chief of Staff in 1998, while Lawrence Summers replaced Rubin as Treasury Secretary in 1999.[23]

Judicial appointments edit

Supreme Court edit

Clinton appointed two justices to the Supreme Court. The first vacancy arose in March 1993, when Associate Justice Byron White informed Clinton of his impending retirement. Clinton considered various nominating political leaders like Mario Cuomo and Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt, whom he believed could become leaders on the court in a similar fashion to Earl Warren.[24] After weeks of consideration, Clinton began to favor appointing an experienced jurist, and he conducted interviews with Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, both of whom served as federal appellate judges. Clinton announced Ginsburg's nomination in June 1993 and she was confirmed by the Senate two months later, making her the second woman to serve on the Supreme Court alongside Sandra Day O'Connor.[25] Harry Blackmun retired in 1994, and Clinton successfully nominated Breyer to succeed Blackmun. The appointments did not greatly affect the ideological balance of the Rehnquist Court, as conservatives continued to hold a narrow majority on the Supreme Court.[26]

Other courts edit

Clinton also appointed 66 judges to the United States Courts of Appeals and 305 judges to the United States district courts. Among Clinton's appellate appointees were future Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, as well as Merrick Garland, who was nominated to the Supreme Court in 2016, though his nomination was never acted on by the Senate. Garland would later go on to become Attorney General under Joe Biden in 2021.

Domestic affairs edit

Budget edit

Clinton proposed a $16 billion stimulus package primarily to aid inner-city programs desired by liberals, but it was defeated by a Republican filibuster in the Senate.[27]

Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 edit

Clinton inherited major budget deficits left over from the Reagan and Bush administrations; fiscal year 1992 had seen a $290 billion deficit. In order to cut the deficit, Bentsen, Panetta, and Rubin urged Clinton to pursue both tax increases and spending cuts. They argued that by taming the deficit, Clinton would encourage Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan to lower interest rates, which, along with increased confidence among investors, would lead to an economic boom. Some of Clinton's advisers also believed that a focus on cutting the deficit would be politically beneficial since it would potentially help Democrats shed their supposed "tax and spend" reputation.[28] Though Secretary of Labor Robert Reich argued that stagnant earnings represented a bigger economic issue than the deficits, Clinton decided to pursue deficit reduction as the major economic priority of his first year in office.[29] In doing so, he reluctantly abandoned a middle-class tax cut that he had championed during the campaign.[30]

Clinton presented his budget plan to Congress in February 1993, proposing a mix of tax increases and spending reductions that would cut the deficit in half by 1997.[31] Republican leaders strongly opposed any tax increase, and they pressured congressional Republicans to unite in opposition to Clinton's budget,[32] and not a single Republican would vote in favor of Clinton's proposed bill.[29] Senate Democrats eliminated the implementation of a new energy tax in favor of an increase in the gasoline tax, but Clinton successfully resisted efforts to defeat his proposed expansion of the earned income tax credit.[33] By narrow margins, the Senate and the House of Representatives both passed versions of Clinton's budget bill, and a conference committee settled the differences between the House and Senate. The House passed the final bill in a 218–216 vote. After intensely lobbying Bob Kerrey and other Democratic senators, Clinton won passage of his bill in the Senate in 50–50 tie vote; Vice President Gore broke the tie. Clinton signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 (OBRA–93) into law on August 10, 1993.[34] The bill provided for $255 billion in spending cuts over a five-year period, with much of those cuts affecting Medicare and the military. It also provided for $241 billion in new revenue over five years; most of that revenue came from an increased gasoline tax or from higher taxes on those who made over $100,000 per year.[35]

Government shutdowns edit

After Republicans took control of Congress in the 1994 elections, incoming Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich promised a conservative "revolution" that would implement tax cuts, welfare reform, and major domestic spending cuts.[36] Gingrich failed to deliver major conservative reforms in the first hundred days of the 104th Congress, but many observers continued to wonder if the Speaker would seize stewardship over domestic policy from the office of the president.[37] Meanwhile, with conservatism on the rise and New Deal liberalism in retreat, Clinton hoped to forge a new consensus that did not totally reject government interventionism.[38] In reaction to his party's electoral defeat, Clinton hired consultant Dick Morris, who advocated that Clinton pursue a policy of triangulation between conservative Republicans and liberal Democrats. By co-opting some of Republican ideas, Morris argued that Clinton could boost his own popularity while blocking the possibility of the drastic reforms advocated by some conservatives.[38]

The Republican Congress presented Clinton with a budget plan that cut Medicare spending and instituted major tax cuts for the wealthy, giving him a November 14, 1995 deadline to approve the bill. After the deadline, the government would be forced to temporarily shut down due to a lack of funding. In reaction, Clinton presented his own plan that did not include spending cuts to Medicare but would balance the budget by 2005. As Clinton refused to sign the Republican bill, major portions of the government suspended operations until Congress enacted a stopgap measure.[39] The government shut down again on December 16 after Clinton vetoed a Republican budget proposal that would have extended tax cuts to the wealthy, cut spending on social programs, and shifted control of Medicaid to the states. After a 21-day government shutdown, Republicans, in danger of being seen as extremists by many in the public, accepted Clinton's budget.[40]

Line item veto edit

Clinton secured passage of the Line Item Veto Act of 1996, becoming the first president to obtain that power although many had sought it. Its effect was very brief as the act was soon ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in Clinton v. City of New York.[41]

Budget surplus edit

 
Gross US Federal Debt as a Percentage of GDP, by political party of President

Combined with a strong economy, the 1993 deficit reduction plan produced smaller budget deficits each year. With the improving state of the federal budget, Clinton and congressional Republicans reached a budget agreement in 1997 that provided for relatively small changes to the budget. In 1998, the federal government experienced the first budget surplus since the 1960s. Reflecting the importance of the budget surplus, the New York Times described the end of budget deficits as "the fiscal equivalent of the fall of the Berlin Wall."[42] Though Republican leaders called for large tax cuts in light of the budgetary surplus, Clinton successfully resisted any major budgetary changes in the last three years of his term.[43] In 1997, Clinton agreed to a deal with Republicans that lowered the tax rate on capital gains to 18 percent, implemented a $500 child tax credit, increased funding for children's health care, and raised the federal cigarette tax from 24 cents per pack to 39 cents per pack.[44] Republicans did, however, block some of Clinton's favored policies, including an increase of the federal minimum wage and legislation designed to provide free prescription drugs to seniors.[45]

Health care edit

1993 health care plan edit

When Clinton took office, approximately twenty percent of American adults lacked health insurance, despite the fact that the United States spent more on health care than other developed countries.[1][46] Many liberals advocated the establishment of a single-payer healthcare system similar to that of Canada, while a group of congressional Republicans developed a plan consisting of government subsidies and the implementation of a mandate that would require individuals to purchase health insurance.[46] The administration formed a task force, led by First Lady Hillary Clinton, that was charged with creating a plan that would provide for universal health care. Assigning a major policy role to the First Lady was unprecedented and sparked controversy.[47] Rejecting calls for a single-payer system, she proposed a health care plan based on the extension of employer-based health insurance. Individuals not insured by employers would be insured by the government.[48] The plan would also expand the government's regulatory role in a concept known as "managed competition", with the government setting a minimum level of benefits that each plan could provide. Additionally, the plan would prevent insurers from charging different rates to customers based on age and pre-existing conditions.[49]

After winning the passage of OBRA–93 and the ratification of NAFTA in 1993, the President made health care his major area of legislative focus in 1994.[50] Though many corporations supported Clinton's health care proposal in hopes of reducing their own costs, several other groups strongly objected to the plan. Liberals criticized Clinton for not proposing more far-reaching reforms, while conservatives attacked the expansion of government. Interest groups ran ad campaigns alleging that the Clinton health care bill would lead to health care rationing, reduced choices, and increased costs.[51] The Health Insurance Association of America's "Harry and Louise" ad campaign proved especially important in influencing the public against the Clinton health care bill.[52] Meanwhile, Congressmen Newt Gingrich and columnist Bill Kristol convinced congressional Republicans to resist any form of compromise. Clinton's decision not to engage congressional Democrats and moderate Republicans early in 1993, and his own refusal to compromise on various aspects of the bill, further damaged any hope of passing a major health care bill. With Republicans unified against his plan, and with his own party divided, Clinton decided to abandon health care reform in September 1994.[53]

Other health care legislation edit

Within a month of taking office, Clinton signed the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993. The act, which had been vetoed twice by Bush, guaranteed workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid medical leave for certain medical and family reasons, including pregnancy.[29]

In August 1996, Clinton signed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. The bipartisan bill granted people the right to keep their insurance plan if they changed jobs, and also contained several other health care reforms.[54] In October 1996, Senator Ted Kennedy introduced a bill to provide health care coverage for children of the working poor, to be financed via a 75 cents a pack cigarette tax increase.[55] Working with Clinton and Republican Senator Orrin Hatch, Kennedy won passage of the Children's Health Insurance Program in 1997.[56]

Welfare reform edit

The successful passage of welfare reform in the 1990s was President Clinton's strategy of "triangulation"-purposely positioning himself midway between liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans, thereby building a majority coalition and enabling him to take full credit for the results. The strategy was called "triangulation".[57][58]

Shortly after the end of the government shutdown, Clinton announced his plan to pursue major changes to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program, which provided financial assistance to low-income families with children. Clinton believed that the program inadvertently trapped many poor families and individuals in a cycle of poverty, and he favored shifting funding from AFDC to job training and child care programs.[59] Republicans shared Clinton's goal of making major changes to the welfare system, but they were unwilling to fund the job training programs and wanted to prevent legal immigrants from receiving welfare benefits.[60] Clinton twice vetoed Republican plans that terminated AFDC, but he ultimately decided that he favored the Republican reform plan over no reform at all. In July 1996, Clinton signed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act, which terminated AFDC. In its place, the bill created the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, which imposed new work requirements for and lifetime limits on aid recipients, and shifted responsibility for the administration of the programs to the states.[59] Due in part to the improving economy and the expansion of the earned income tax credit, the number of Americans receiving cash public assistance declined from 12.2 million in 1996 to 5.3 million in 2001.[61]

Commentators have sometimes speculated that Clinton's emphasis on entrepreneurship and the post-industrial sector was the co-option of conservative ideas first presented by Reagan Republicans in the 1980s.[62] However Brent Cebul argues that triangulation represented a traditional liberal effort to structure the economy with the goals of creating new jobs, and producing fresh tax revenues that can support progressive policy innovations. This tradition goes back to the local and state policies inspired by the New Deal, and the "supply-side liberalism" of the 1970s.[63]

Other welfare edit

In 1993 substantive changes were made to food stamps[64] while the HUD Demonstration Act of 1993 authorized several demonstrations, including "an Innovative Homeless Initiatives Demonstration program, the section 8 pension fund demonstration, and the NCDI program."[65]

A Direct Student Loan Program was introduced, along with an Early Head Start program for children aged 0 to 3 and a Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund to support both specialized financial institutions and traditional banks serving lower-income communities. In addition, the Medicare Benefit Package was expanded.[66] The Earned Income Tax Credit was expanded to give a larger benefit to working families and allow childless workers to benefit as well. In 1996, Congress passed a 20% increase in the minimum wage, which boosted earnings for nearly 10 million Americans. As part of the Clinton Administration's welfare reforms, over 200,000 people on welfare received housing vouchers to help them move closer to jobs, while a welfare-to-work tax credit encouraged businesses to hire long-term welfare recipients. In addition, communities received federal support to design transportation solutions to help low-income workers get to work.

Better nutritional support was provided for low-income families, with Congress (under Clinton's watch) increasing federal support for several critical nutritional and housing support programs. The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children went from average annual funding levels of $2.7 billion in the eight years before Clinton took office to $3.9 billion under his presidency, while the Food Stamp program went from an average of $21.3 billion a year to $24.9 billion. In terms of housing, funding for federal housing assistance grew from an average of $20.4 billion a year in the eight years before Clinton's term to an average of $29 billion a year during his presidency.

In 1997, a child tax credit was introduced that directly reduced a family's income tax bill by $500 per eligible child. In addition, federal funding for the Head Start program rose from $3.3 billion (in constant 2000 dollars) to $5.3 billion in 2000.[67]

In 1993, AmeriCorps was established, a community service program that provided young people with an opportunity to serve their communities and earn money for college or skills training. In just five years, nearly 200,000 young people were enrolled in the program.

Economy edit

Federal finances and GDP during Clinton's presidency[68]
Fiscal
year
Receipts Outlays Surplus/
deficit
GDP Debt as a %
of GDP[69]
1993 1,154.3 1,409.4 −255.1 6,775.3 47.9
1994 1,258.6 1,461.8 −203.2 7,176.9 47.8
1995 1,351.8 1,515.7 −164.0 7,560.4 47.7
1996 1,453.1 1,560.5 −107.4 7,951.3 47.0
1997 1,579.2 1,601.1 −21.9 8,451.0 44.6
1998 1,721.7 1,652.5 69.3 8,930.8 41.7
1999 1,827.5 1,701.8 125.6 9,479.4 38.3
2000 2,025.2 1,789.0 236.2 10,117.5 33.7
2001 1,991.1 1,862.8 128.2 10,526.5 31.5
Ref. [70] [71] [72]
 
Budget deficits and surpluses in billions of dollars, 1971–2001

Clinton presided over a "Goldilocks economy", a period of low inflation and low unemployment.[73] During the 1990s, the Dow Jones Industrial Average quadrupled, and the share of families with investments in stocks rose from 32 percent in 1989 to 51 percent in 2001.[74] Income inequality also grew, as the richest households earned a higher proportion of the total income.[75] Nonetheless, median household income, adjusted for inflation to 2000 dollars, grew from $38,262 in 1995 to $42,151 in 2000. By 2000, the unemployment rate had declined to four percent, while the poverty rate had declined to 11.3 percent.[73]

David Greenberg, a professor of history and media studies at Rutgers University, argued that:

By the end of the Clinton presidency, the numbers were uniformly impressive. Besides the record-high surpluses and the record-low poverty rates, the economy could boast the longest economic expansion in history; the lowest unemployment since the early 1970s; and the lowest poverty rates for single mothers, black Americans, and the aged.[76]

Clinton proposed a $30 billion economic stimulus package in his first year in office, but his proposal was blocked by Senate Republicans, and he would be unable to win the passage of any similar proposal for the remainder of his presidency. Clinton held office at a time when monetarism had supplanted Keynesianism as the dominant theory of economic growth among many in Washington. Under the theory of monetarism, Clinton's fiscal policies would have relatively little impact on the economy. Instead, monetarists contended that the economy was guided by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, a group of appointed officials who set monetary policy. Throughout Clinton's presidency, Alan Greenspan served as the chairman of the Federal Reserve, and he emerged as an especially prominent public figure as the economy improved in mid-to-late 1990s.[77] Though much of the credit for the strong economy was assigned to Greenspan, the Clinton administration also basked in the approval of Americans who enjoyed the benefits of a strong economy, and good economic conditions helped Clinton remain popular despite controversies over his personal life.[78]

Deregulation edit

Clinton presided over a period of deregulation in the telecommunications and financial industries. In 1999, Clinton signed into law the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act (GLBA). The act repealed a provision of the New Deal's Glass–Steagall Act of 1933 that had required banks to either classify themselves as either commercial bank, which were subject to federal oversight and protections like deposit insurance, or as investment banks, which faced less regulations but did not benefit from federal protections. The financial services industry had attempted to repeal this provision of the GLBA since the 1980s, and they were finally successful due to cooperation from Secretary of the Treasury Rubin and Clintonians, who believed that the financial industry needed looser regulation in order for it to remain competitive globally.[79] The bill passed both houses of Congress with only minimal resistance. Opposition to the plan came primarily from liberals like Senator Paul Wellstone, who feared that looser banking regulations would lead to financial crises.[80]

Shortly before leaving office, Clinton signed the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, which deregulated trading of derivatives. The bill also included the "Enron loophole", which lessened regulation of energy trading by companies such as Enron.[81] Clinton also signed the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which represented the first major overhaul of the Communications Act of 1934.[82]

Gay rights edit

Clinton supported the right of homosexual individuals to serve in the military, and, along with Secretary of Defense Les Aspin, he developed a plan that would allow openly gay individuals to serve in the military. Clinton's proposal received strong pushback from military leaders, especially Marine Commandant Carl Epting Mundy Jr. In response, General Colin Powell suggested a compromise solution in which the military would not ask recruits about their sexual orientation, but would retain the right to discharge those who were gay. Clinton resisted the compromise policy, which became known as "don't ask, don't tell", but congressional leaders of both parties made it clear that they would reverse any executive order allowing gay individuals to openly serve in the military.[83] Clinton ultimately accepted the don't ask, don't tell policy, and over the ensuing ten years approximately 10,000 people were discharged from the military after they revealed their homosexuality.[84] In September 1996, Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act, which denied federal recognition to same-sex marriages,[85] though it had passed with a veto-proof majority and he called the law unnecessary and divisive.[86][87]

Abortion edit

On taking office, Clinton revoked a gag order that had prevented abortion counseling in federally funded clinics. He also signed an executive order allowing the use of fetal tissue in medical research. These early policies moves signaled Clinton's break with the socially conservative policies of his predecessors.[88] Clinton also signed the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, which made it a federal crime to obstruct abortion clinics and places of worship.[89] In April 1996, Clinton vetoed a bill to prohibit late or partial birth abortion calling the procedure potentially life-saving and arguing that the small group of women likely to be affected should not become pawns. Catholic bishops condemned his move.[90] Clinton vetoed another such law in 1997.[91] Republicans later passed the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, which was signed by President George W. Bush in 2003.

In October 1996, Clinton signed into law the Amber Hangerman Child Protection Act, which created the child abduction AMBER Alert system for news stations and the national sex offender registry.[92][93]

Firearms edit

In November 1993, Clinton signed the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act, which required a background check for gun purchasers.[94] In 1994, Clinton signed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which included a provision known as the Federal Assault Weapons Ban. The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act provided funding for 100,000 local law enforcement officials, and established a federal three-strikes law that enhanced criminal penalties for repeat offenders.[95] The Federal Assault Weapons Ban barred the sale of several kinds of Semi-automatic rifles, but the provision did not apply to the 1.5 million semi-automatic rifles already in the possession of private owners, nor did it affect other types of guns.[96]

Environmentalism edit

Liberal Democrats gave environmentalism a higher priority than the economy-focused Clinton did.[97] The Clinton administration responded to public demand for environmental protection.[98] Clinton created 17 national monuments by executive order, prohibiting commercial activities such as logging, mining, and drilling for oil or gas.[99] Clinton also imposed a permanent freeze on drilling in maritime sanctuaries.[100] Other presidential and departmental orders protected various wetlands and coastal resources and extended the existing moratorium on new oil leases off the coast line through 2013.[101] After the Republican victory in the 1994 elections, Clinton vetoed a series of budget bills that contained amendments designed to scale back environmental restrictions.[102] Clinton boasted that his administration "adopted the strongest air-quality protections ever, improved the safety of our drinking water and food, cleaned up about three times as many toxic waste sites as the two previous administrations combined, [and] helped to promote a new generation of fuel-efficient vehicles and vehicles that run on alternative fuels".[103]

Vice President Gore was keenly concerned with global climate change, and Clinton created the President's Council on Sustainable Development. In November 1998, Clinton signed the Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement in which developed countries committed to reducing carbon emissions. However, the Senate refused to ratify it since the agreement did not apply to the rapidly growing emissions of developing countries, such as China, India, and Indonesia.[104]

The key person on environmental issues was Bruce Babbitt, the former head of the League of Conservation Voters, who served for all eight years as Clinton's Secretary of the Interior. According to John D. Leshy:

His most remembered legacies will likely be his advocacy of environmental restoration, his efforts to safeguard and build support for the ESA (Endangered Species Act of 1973) and the biodiversity that it helps protect., And the public land conservation measures that flowered on his watch.[105]

The Interior Department worked to protect scenic and historic areas of America's federal public lands. In 2000 Babbitt created the National Landscape Conservation System, a collection of 15 U.S. National Monuments and 14 National Conservation Areas to be managed by the Bureau of Land Management in such a way as to keep them "healthy, open, and wild."

A major issue involved low fees charged ranchers who grazed cattle on public lands. The "animal unit month" (AUM) fee was only $1.35 and was far below the 1983 market value. The argument was that the federal government in effect was subsidizing ranchers, with a few major corporations controlling millions of acres of grazing land. Babbitt and Oklahoma Congressman Mike Synar tried to rally environmentalists and raise fees, but senators from the Western United States successfully blocked their proposals.[106][107]

Agriculture edit

Although Governor Clinton had a large farm base in Arkansas, as president he sharply cut support for farmers and raised taxes on tobacco.[108] At one high level policy meeting budget expert Alice Rivlin told the president she had a new slogan for his reelection campaign: "I'm going to end welfare as we know it for farmers." Clinton was annoyed and retorted, "Farmers are good people. I know we have to do these things. We're going to make these cuts. But we don't have to feel good about it."[109]

With exports accounting for more than a fourth of farm output, farm organizations joined business interests to defeat human rights activists regarding Most Favored Nation (MFN) trade status for China. They took the position that major tariff increases would hurt importers and consumers. They warned that China would retaliate to hurt American exporters. They wanted more liberal trade policies and less attention to Chinese human rights abuses.[110]

Environmentalists began taking a keen interest in agricultural policies. The feared that farming had a growing negative impact on the environment in terms of soil erosion and the destruction of wetlands. The expanding use of pesticides and fertilizers polluted soil and water not just on each farm but downstream into rivers and lakes and urban areas as well.[111]

Education edit

In the eight years before Clinton took office, federal funding for primary and secondary education averaged $8.5 billion a year, but over Clinton's two terms that average rose to $11.1 billion. The considerable increase in funding was supported by the Improving America's Schools Act of 1994, which reauthorized the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. The goals were to improve accountability in schools and help low-income students succeed, while giving schools new authority to incorporate technology into curricula so that every student would be able to benefit from the technology revolution and contribute to its next wave.

Federal support for higher education was also expanded, with the maximum Pell Grant award increased and funding levels for student financial assistance increased by 20% by the end of Clinton's term. The 1993 Student Loan Reform Act introduced direct federal student loans, leading to both lower borrowing costs for students and billions in savings for the federal government. In 1997, two tax credits were passed to help defray the costs of higher education: the Hope Scholarship tax credit and the Lifetime Learning tax credit. Federal funding for scientific research was boosted, with funding for the National Science Foundation increased by more than 30%, and the annual budget for the Department of Energy's Office of Science nearly doubled to $2.8 billion.[67] The GEAR UP college preparation program, launched in 1998, started to provide federal grants to high-poverty middle schools and high schools. All students within those schools were provided with services to help them succeed in school and enter college, and as of 2000–2001, 200,000 students were served by GEAR UP.[112] To increase Internet access and reduce the "digital divide" funding for Community Technology Centers (which were located in urban and rural neighborhoods that had little or no Internet access) was tripled. Expanded Educational technology was expanded, with the amount spent on educational technology increased from $27 million in 1994 to $769 million by 2000, and as part of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Clinton won the inclusion of "E-Rate", which subsidized Internet access for schools and libraries.

Health edit

In the eight years before Clinton took office, the National Institutes of Health spent an average of $9 billion a year, but under Clinton Congress boosted NIH funding by 40 percent to average $12.7 billion annually. By 2000 federal NIH funding had surpassed $15 billion a year, a 50% increase over NIH spending when Clinton first took office, and the highest level of research funding ever spent on research on health and disease.

Community reinvestment edit

Under Clinton's direction, lenders covered under the Community Reinvestment Act stepped up their efforts, with 1993 to 1999, banks and thrifts subject to CRA making $800 billion in sustainable home mortgage, small-business, and community development loans to low- and moderate-income borrowers and communities from 1993 to 1999. In 2001, the New Markets and Community Renewal initiative was passed by Congress, which invested $25 billion in new incentives for growth in low-income communities to create nine new Empowerment Zones, bringing the total created under Clinton to 40. The low-income housing tax credit was increased to build an additional 700,000 units of affordable housing, and the New Markets Tax Credit was created, which encouraged venture capital firms to support small-business startups and rural development. In addition, 40 Renewal Communities were created with targeted, pro-growth tax benefits to spur robust outside investment. As a means of creating a nationwide network of community development banks, the Treasury Department's Community Development Financial Institutions Fund was established. By 2000, the CDFI Fund had issued $436 million in total grants, loans, equity investments, and technical assistance to local financial institutions, banks, and thrifts, which increased their community development activities by upward of $2.4 billion.[67] In 1999, the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act, designed to help beneficiaries of SSI who wished to work to join the workforce without losing their Medicaid benefits, was signed into law.[113]

Responding to declining home-ownership rates for low-income families, Clinton sought to reform the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) to encourage banks to make loans to inhabitants of low-income areas. The administration implemented new rules that would prevent banks from expanding if they failed to meet benchmarks for loans to low-income areas. Between 1993 and 1998, CRA lending increased at a faster rate than other loans, and home values in many CRA areas rose. Banks implemented new strategies designed to cater to lower-income borrowers, including the adjustable-rate mortgage.[114] This effort was part of a broader initiative, the National Homeownership Strategy, which helped increase the share of Americans who owned their own homes from 64 percent to 67.4 percent during Clinton's presidency. Many of the sub-prime mortgages that allowed Americans to purchase homes would later play a role in sparking the Financial crisis of 2007–2008.[115]

Other policies edit

Copyright edit

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act, enacted by Clinton on October 21, 1998, served as the first significant amendment to the Copyright Act since 1976. The DMCA provided a framework for sound recording copyright owners and recording artists to seek public performance royalties under statute, which proved to be a landmark achievement for the recording industry.[citation needed] The law included a provision reiterating the "fair use" of copyrighted materials, and another provision that exempted internet service providers from responsibility for inadvertently transmitting copyrighted works.[116] That same month, Clinton also signed the Copyright Term Extension Act, which retroactively extended copyright protection and stopped copyrighted works entering into the public domain for an extra twenty years.[117]

Pardons edit

"Pardongate" was the Bill Clinton pardon controversy when critics attacked his manner of giving out 450 pardons, a third of them on his last day in office.[118] Scholars use two different models to describe the pardons process. Clinton used the presidential model, viewing the pardon power as a convenient resource to be used to help party activists or to advance specific policy goals. Critics favored the agency model, which views the pardons process as a nonpolitical matter for legal experts in the Department of Justice. An investigation found that he was legally within his rights.[119]

Foreign affairs edit

 
Clinton made 54 international trips to 73 different countries during his presidency.[120]

Critics agree that foreign policy was not a high priority for Clinton and his administration. According to Harvard Professor Stephen Walt:[121]

Critics on the right argue that he is too eager to accommodate a rising China, too blind to Russia's corruption and cronyism, and too slow to use force against states like Yugoslavia or Iraq. On the left, liberals bemoan Clinton's failure to prevent the genocide in Rwanda, his tardy response to the bloodletting in the Balkans, and his abandonment of his early pledge to build a multilateral world order grounded in stronger international institutions. Even pragmatic centrists find him wanting, deriding his foreign policy as "social work" that is too easily swayed by ethnic lobbies, public opinion polls, and media buzz.

Walt, however, gives two cheers for Clinton's realism and his accomplishments:[122]

Under Clinton, the United States consolidated its Cold War victory by bringing three former Warsaw Pact members into its own alliance. It shored up its alliances in East Asia and readied itself for a possible competition with a rising China while encouraging Beijing to accept a status quo that favored the United States....It forced its allies to bear a greater share of the burden in Europe and East Asia while insisting on leading both alliances. And together with its NATO allies, it asserted the right to intervene in the sovereign territory of other states, even without Security Council authorization. Clinton may cloak U.S. policy in the rhetoric of "world order" and general global interests, but its defining essence remains the unilateral exercise of sovereign power.

Trade edit

With the end of the Cold War, trade became an increasingly prominent issue in international politics, as countries sought reduced tariffs and other trade agreements. Clinton believed that globalization would promote economic prosperity and democratization throughout the world, and he pursued several major trade agreements.[123] President Bush had signed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Canada and Mexico in the final year of his term, but the agreement had not yet been ratified when Clinton took office. Opposition to NAFTA crossed party lines, as organized labor allies like Democratic Congressman Dick Gephardt and conservative isolationists like Pat Buchanan both opposed ratification.[124] With the fate of NAFTA still uncertain in the House of Representatives, Vice President Gore met Ross Perot in a televised debate. Gore's strong performance in the debate, as well as the Clinton administration's effective lobbying campaign, helped NAFTA win ratification in November 1993.[125][126]

The administration negotiated approximately 300 trade agreements with other countries.[127] By granting China temporary most favoured nation status in 1993,[128] his administration minimized tariff levels on Chinese imports.[129] In 2000, Clinton signed a bill granting permanent normal trade relations to China, and American imports from China massively increased in the subsequent years.[130]

Irish peace talks edit

 
Clinton shaking hands with Gerry Adams outside a business in East Belfast, November 30, 1995

In 1992, before his presidency, Clinton proposed sending a peace envoy to Northern Ireland, but this was dropped to avoid tensions with the British government. In November 1995, in a ceasefire during the Troubles, Clinton became the first president to visit Northern Ireland, examining both of the two divided communities of Belfast.[131] Despite unionist criticism, Clinton used this as a way to negotiate an end to the violent conflict with London, Dublin, the paramilitaries and the other groups. Clinton went on to play a key role in the peace talks, which produced the Good Friday Agreement in 1998.[132]

Military interventions edit

Somalia edit

Unrest in Somalia had escalated into a full-scale civil war in 1991. President Bush had dispatched 25,000 soldiers to the country to join a United Nations peacekeeping mission. By the late 1993, Somalia remained in a state of civil war, and 4,000 American soldiers still served in the UN peacekeeping mission. In October 1993, U.S. special forces launched a raid on Mogadishu with the intention of capturing warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid, who had led attacks against U.N. forces. The raid ended in failure and in the deaths of eighteen Americans. The humiliating incident led Americans to question the presence of U.S. soldiers in Somalia. After Somali leaders signed a peace agreement in early 1994, Clinton removed U.S. forces from the country.[133][134]

Rwanda edit

The experience in Somalia exacerbated internal debates around the role of American military power in the Post–Cold War era. In a victory for those who favored non-intervention, Clinton placed new limits on the deployment of his troops, especially as part of U.N. peacekeeping missions. In April 1994, the Hutu of Rwanda engaged in a genocide against the minority Tutsi, killing 800,000 people in a three-month span. The UN sent a small force to provide aid, but the U.S., with no strategic or economic interest in the country, did not intervene. Clinton would later describe the non-intervention in Rwanda as the worst mistake of his administration.[135][136]

Haiti edit

A military junta in Haiti had ousted the country's democratically elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, in 1991. Clinton was inclined to restore Aristide, in part due to stem the flow of Haitians fleeing to the U.S. However many Americans opposed a military intervention in a nation which posed no threat to the United States. Despite congressional and public opposition, Clinton announced in September 1994 that he would remove the junta if it did not voluntarily relinquish power.[137] At the same time, he sent a peace mission consisting of Powell, former President Jimmy Carter, and Senator Sam Nunn to convince the military government to step aside. As U.S. soldiers prepared to launch a strike against Haiti, the military government agreed to restore Aristide and no combat took place.[138]

Balkans: Serbia, Bosnia edit

 
Map of the six Yugoslav republics and autonomous provinces in 1991[139]

During the closing stages of the Cold War, Serbian nationalist Slobodan Milošević took power as the leader of the Socialist Republic of Serbia. His nationalist policies alienated leaders of the other constituent countries of Yugoslavia, a multi-ethnic state that had been established in 1918. Slovenia, Croatia, and the Republic of Macedonia each declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, but Serbian forces forcefully opposed Croatia's independence, beginning the Yugoslav Wars. In 1992, Bosnia and Herzegovina also declared independence. As in Croatia, a significant minority of Serbs opposed to independence lived in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the Bosnian War began between proponents and opponents of independence.[140] Ethnic cleansing campaigns conducted by Bosnian Serbs provoked world condemnation, and the issue of whether to intervene in the Balkan Wars posed one of the greatest foreign policy questions as Clinton took office. Activists such Elie Wiesel pressured Clinton to help put an end to the ethnic cleansing, and Clinton himself wanted to do something to end the violence.[141] General Colin Powell initially convinced Clinton to abstain from a military intervention, arguing that the United States should not become involved in a region in which it lacked clear strategic interests.[142]

In May 1994, after Serb forces invaded safe zones established by the United Nations Protection Force, Clinton authorized air strikes against Serb positions.[143] The air strikes did not end Serb advances, and in July 1995 over 8,000 Bosniaks were killed in the Srebrenica massacre. Clinton and National Security Adviser Anthony Lake formulated a plan to end the genocide in Bosnia, with the key part of the plan being a major NATO air campaign against the Bosnian Serbs. After Clinton won the support of European leaders for the campaign, NATO launched Operation Deliberate Force. In reaction to bombing campaign and the advance of Bosniak forces, Milošević agreed to begin peace talks.[144] Clinton sponsored the talks in Dayton Ohio, putting Richard Holbrooke in charge.[145] The subsequent Dayton Agreement ended the Bosnian War and divided Bosnia into two autonomous regions.[146]

Kosovo edit

In 1998, the Kosovo War broke out in Kosovo, an autonomous province of Serbia. A group of ethnic Albanians known as the Kosovo Liberation Army sought independence, launching attacks against Serb forces. In putting down the attacks, Serb forces engaged in an ethnic cleaning campaign against the Albanian population. Though NATO leaders were reluctant to become involved, and Russia threatened to veto any U.N. resolution allowing for military action, many of Clinton's advisers called for another intervention in the Balkans.[147] Hoping to again force Milošević into peace talks, Clinton ordered a bombing campaign against Serb forces in March 1999. As Milošević refused to capitulate, NATO escalated the bombing campaign, resulting in the devastation of the Serbian capital of Belgrade. As domestic opposition to his leadership grew, Milošević agreed to withdraw troops and allow NATO-led peacekeeping force to be stationed in Kosovo. Kosovo's status would be disputed in subsequent years, while Milošević was overthrown in October 2000.[148][149]

NATO and Russia edit

 
Clinton presided over the admission of Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic into NATO

One of Clinton's major priorities was the expansion of NATO into former Eastern Bloc countries in Eastern Europe, as Clinton believed that NATO would provide a stabilizing influence on these countries. Russian leaders felt threatened as NATO approached its border. Clinton cultivated a close relationship with Russian President Boris Yeltsin, and in 1997, Clinton won Yeltsin's reluctant assent to the expansion of NATO, clearing the way for the accession of Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic.[150] Yeltsin pressed for a commitment not to expand NATO into the Baltic states, but Clinton was not willing to bind his successors to such a promise. The French pushed for the addition of Romania and Slovenia to NATO, but Clinton opposed this move, as he believed that too quick of an expansion into Eastern Europe would dilute the strength of NATO.[151]

Clinton tried to help Yeltsin avoid an economic depression, reform the Russian economy, and prevent a resurgence of Communism. Clinton quietly helped Yeltsin win reelection in 1996, and played a major role in Russia's entrance into the Group of Eight (G8), a conference of the countries with the largest economies.[152][153]

Terrorism edit

Terrorism emerged as an increasingly important national security issue during Clinton's administration.[154] In the closing years of the Soviet–Afghan War, Osama bin Laden had organized al-Qaeda, a militant Sunni organization. The al-Qaeda leaders despised Western values, and were particularly incensed by the U.S. military presence in Saudi Arabia. Al-Qaeda grew during the 1990s and engaged in terrorism in the Middle East and elsewhere.[155] The group claimed responsibility for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, the bombings of two U.S. embassies in East Africa, and the bombing of a U.S. ship at port in Yemen. In retaliation, Clinton ordered the bombing of al-Qaeda facilities in Afghanistan and Sudan. The Central Intelligence Agency and the military tracked bin Laden's movements in an attempt to capture or kill him, but Bin Laden evaded capture deep within the mountains of Afghanistan.[156][157]

North Korea edit

 
Jo Myong-rok (center right), Kim Jong-il's defence minister, with U.S. Secretary of Defense William Cohen, 2000

In 1994, North Korea blocked international inspectors from verifying the regime's adherence to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. The administration believed that the North Koreans were processing plutonium from a reactor to build two atomic bombs.[158]

President Clinton recalled that "I was determined to prevent North Korea from developing a nuclear arsenal, even at the risk of war".[158] Declassified Clinton-era documents illustrate that the administration had planned for a possible war during the 1994 nuclear crisis.[159]

The Pentagon had hypothetical plans to strike the North Korea nuclear reactor at Yongbyon, but the order was never given.[160]

Middle East edit

Clinton sought to mediate the Arab–Israeli conflict, encouraging the leaders of Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization to reach the 1993 Oslo Accords.[161] A subsequent agreement created the Palestinian National Authority, which was given control over the Gaza strip, a territory that Israel had taken control of in the 1967 Six-Day War. During his second terms, Clinton sought to revive the dormant peace process, specifically by convincing Israel to turn over control of the West Bank, another territory captured in the Six-Day War. Clinton hosted the 2000 Camp David Summit between Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, but the two sides were unable to reach an agreement. In September 2000, the Palestinians launched an uprising known as the Second Intifada, which would continue after the end of Clinton's presidency.[162]

Clinton maintained the economic sanctions and the no-fly zones imposed on Iraq in the aftermath of the Persian Gulf War. In retaliation for Iraq's attempted assassination of former President Bush, Clinton ordered cruise missile strikes on the headquarters of the Iraqi Intelligence Service.[161] After Hussein repeatedly obstructed the UN commission charged with monitoring Iraq's WMD program, the U.S. and Britain engaged in a bombing campaign against Iraqi weapon facilities.[163] These raids would continue intermittently until the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[164]

Mexico edit

In January 1995, Clinton's economic advisers informed him that the Mexican government would default on its loans unless the U.S. offered a $25 billion loan package. Though Clinton and Speaker of the House Gingrich both believed that preventing the Mexican economy from collapsing was important to U.S. interests, Congress refused to authorize an aid package.[165] The Clinton administration also helped limit the effects of the 1997 Asian financial crisis by keeping U.S. markets open.[166]

Other issues edit

Despite opposition from conservatives and veterans of the Vietnam War, Clinton normalized relations with Vietnam in 1995. That same year, he became the first U.S. president to visit Vietnam. Clinton was also the first president to visit Botswana, Slovenia, and South Africa.[167]

In 1997, Tony Blair of the Labour Party won election as the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Clinton and Blair shared a centrist approach to politics, and they jointly promoted their "Third Way" (between traditional left-wing and right-wing policies) on the international stage.[168]

Impeachment and acquittal edit

Prior to taking office, Bill and Hillary Clinton had invested in the Whitewater Development Corporation, a real estate development company owned by Jim McDougal and Susan McDougal that quickly went bankrupt. The McDougals were later charged with fraud due to their activities connected to a savings and loan association. The July 1993 death of Deputy White House Counsel Vince Foster raised new allegations about the Clintons' connections to the savings and loan associations, marking the start of what became known as the Whitewater controversy. To defuse allegations stemming from Foster's death, Clinton authorized Attorney General Reno to appoint a special prosecutor under the terms of the Ethics in Government Act. Later, a special three-judge panel convened and appointed Ken Starr, a former U.S. solicitor general, as an independent counsel charged with investigating the Whitewater controversy. Starr's investigation expanded beyond Whitewater, in part because of a sexual harassment lawsuit filed against Clinton by Paula Jones, a former Arkansas employee.[169]

In 1998, Starr's office learned that a White House intern, Monica Lewinsky, had engaged in an affair with Clinton. In a deposition related to the Jones lawsuit, Clinton swore under oath that he had not engaged in sexual relations with Lewinsky.[170] Clinton was able to squash rumors of the affair until July 1998, when Starr reached an immunity deal with Lewinsky and obtained her confession of the affair. Clinton publicly apologized for having an affair with Lewinsky in September 1998.[171] Though Clinton argued that he had not lied under oath in his answers to the questions asked at the Jones deposition, the House Judiciary Committee began impeachment proceedings against Clinton.[170] The controversy over Lewinsky enveloped Congress and the presidency, derailing the administration's hopes for reforming Medicare and Social Security.[172] Individuals from both parties were outraged by Clinton's affair with an intern, but many Democrats were mollified by Clinton's repeated public apologies and viewed the reaction from the media and Republicans as disproportionate to the gravity of the affair.[173]

The House passed two articles of impeachment against Clinton. In January 1999, the Senate began the second presidential impeachment trial in U.S. history, after that of Andrew Johnson. Removal of the president would require a two-thirds vote of the Senate. Clinton was acquitted of the first article by a vote of 45 to convict to 55 to acquit, and acquitted of the second by a vote of 50–50. In 1999, Congress chose not to renew the independent counsel law that had allowed Starr's appointment, meaning that future investigations of a similar nature would be conducted under the oversight of the Justice Department rather than through a judicial panel. Clinton would later publicly acknowledge that he "knowingly gave evasive and misleading answers" in the Jones deposition.[174]

Elections during the Clinton presidency edit

Democratic seats in Congress
Congress Senate House
103rd[a] 57 258
104th 47 204
105th 45 207
106th 45 211
107th[a] 50[b] 212

1994 mid-term elections edit

A series of controversies, including the debate over gays in the military, contentious confirmation battles, and "Travelgate", sank Clinton's approval ratings to just 37 percent in mid-1993.[175] Further setbacks related to health care and foreign policy left Clinton in a weak position in the lead-up to the 1994 elections.[176] Led by Newt Gingrich, House Republicans created the Contract with America, which promised an overhaul of the federal welfare system and passage of a balanced budget amendment, term limits, and deregulation. Republican won control of both chambers of Congress, picking up 54 seats in the House of Representatives and 9 Senate seats.[177] As the victory gave Republicans unified control of Congress for the first time since 1955, some commentators referred to the 1994 elections as the "Republican Revolution".

1996 re-election campaign edit

 
President Clinton defeated Republican Bob Dole in the 1996 presidential election.

Clinton's handling of the budget and the Bosnian War improved his approval ratings, and his own polling showed him consistently leading Republican challengers throughout 1996.[178] Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole defeated Pat Buchanan and publisher Steve Forbes in the 1996 Republican primaries, and Dole was formally nominated at the August 1996 Republican National Convention. At the convention, Dole selected conservative former Congressman Jack Kemp as his running mate and announced that he favored a 15% across-the-board income tax cut. Perot ran for president again, this time as a member of the Reform Party.[179]

Clinton made a four-day whistle-stop train tour in route to the Democratic convention in Chicago in August. The main theme was centrism. In his acceptance speech Clinton called on the American people to, "help build that bridge to the 21st century for all our children," and avoid Bob Dole's "bridge to the past." He promised more tax cuts and benefits "for the hard-working citizen who plays by the rules." Promising the best is yet to come, he reaffirmed his belief "in a place called Hope, a place called America."[180]

Clinton continued to position himself as a centrist, stating in early 1996 that "the era of Big Government is over." Meanwhile, Dole, one of the oldest major party presidential nominees in history, proved to be an ineffective campaigner. Clinton won by landslides in the popular vote and the Electoral College.[179] Dole performed poorly outside the Mountain states and the South. [181] Clinton built his landslide on the votes of women, African-Americans, Hispanics, younger voters, and retired voters. Dole conceded defeat gracefully and with good humor after nearly a half-century in public office. Turnout was low, at 49%.[182]

Despite Clinton's victory, Republican retained control of the House and the Senate in the 1996 congressional elections.[179] With Republicans in control of Congress, Clinton refrained from proposing major domestic initiatives in his second term.[183] He made a few changes to important positions including Erskine Bowles as his new Chief of Staff. Madeleine Albright became Secretary of State; William Cohen, a Republican, became Secretary of Defense; Anthony Lake became director of the CIA; and Sandy Berger became National Security Advisor.[184]

1998 mid-term elections edit

Congressional party leaders
Senate leaders House leaders
Congress Year Majority Minority Speaker Minority
103rd 1993–1994 Mitchell Dole Foley Michel
104th 1995–1996 Dole Daschle Gingrich Gephardt
1996 Lott[c] Daschle Gingrich Gephardt
105th 1997–1998 Lott Daschle Gingrich Gephardt
106th 1999–2000 Lott Daschle Hastert Gephardt
107th[a] 2001 Daschle[b] Lott Hastert Gephardt

In the midst of the impeachment hearings, Clinton's approval ratings rose above 65 percent. Polls showed that many in the public did not condone Clinton's relations with Lewinsky, but they did not believe that it was grounds for removal from office. Defying predictions of congressional losses, the Democrats picked up five seats in the House of Representatives; neither party gained seats in the Senate.[185] The election represented the first time since 1934 that the party holding the presidency picked up seats in a mid-term election.[186] Gingrich resigned from office after the elections, and he was succeeded as Speaker of the House by Dennis Hastert.[185]

2000 elections and transition period edit

 
Republican George W. Bush defeated Democrat Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election.
 
Outgoing President Bill Clinton and President-elect George W. Bush in the Oval Office on December 19, 2000

The 2000 elections took place on November 7. Clinton was term-limited in 2000 due to the 22nd Amendment. Vice President Al Gore dispatched a challenge from Senator Bill Bradley of New Jersey early in the 2000 Democratic primaries.[187] Gore chose Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, a prominent intra-party critic of Clinton and the affair with Lewinsky, as his running mate.[188] Texas Governor George W. Bush, the son of former President Bush, won the Republican nomination after defeating Senator John McCain of Arizona in the 2000 Republican primaries. For his running mate, Bush selected Dick Cheney, who had served as Secretary of Defense under George H. W. Bush. Pat Buchanan ran as the Reform Party nominee, and he called for a reduction in immigration.[187] Ralph Nader ran as the Green Party candidate, winning support from many liberals who were disappointed by the centrist tendencies of Clinton and Gore.[189]

Bush called for major tax cuts, a partial privatization of Social Security, and school vouchers. He also criticized Clinton for "nation building" in Haiti and other countries, and attacked Clinton's sexual indiscretions.[190] Clinton and Gore had been close political partners for much of Clinton's presidency, but Gore kept his distance from Clinton during the presidential campaign.[191] In the election, Gore won a narrow plurality of the popular vote, taking 48.4 percent to Bush's 47.9 percent and Nader's 2.7 percent. Gore won much of the Northeast, the Midwest, and the Pacific Coast, while Bush dominated the South and the Interior West. However, the winner of the election was unclear on election night, as neither candidate had definitively secured a majority of the electoral vote.[192]

The outcome of the election hinged on Florida, which had endured an extremely close presidential election. Over the ensuing five weeks, both campaigns waged an intense legal battle over election law as Florida conducted a recount. The Supreme Court of Florida unanimously upheld the recount, but the Bush team appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States. On December 12, in a 5–4 decision, the Supreme Court ordered an end to the recount, leaving Bush as the winner of Florida and the winner of the election.[193] Bush became the fourth individual in U.S. history, and the first since 1888, to win the election despite losing the popular vote.[194] Republicans also retained control of the House and the Senate, giving the party unified control of Congress and the presidency for the first time since the 1954 election.[195] Despite the best looking and strong economy in years, Clinton's legacy was overshadowed by Gore's election loss in 2000, however Clinton still left office with 66% approval rating.

Evaluation and legacy edit

 
Graph of Clinton's approval ratings in Gallup polls

Polls of historians and political scientists have generally ranked Clinton as an above-average president. A 2017 C-SPAN poll of historians ranked Clinton as the 15th best president.[196] A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association's Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Clinton as the 13th best president.[197]

Clinton's "third way" of moderate liberalism built up the nation's fiscal health, resisted Republican attacks, and put the nation on a firm footing abroad amid globalization and the development of anti-American terrorist organizations.[198]

Addressing Clinton's legacy, Russell L. Riley writes:

Clinton managed to remake the image and operations of the Democratic Party in ways that effectively undermined the so-called Reagan Revolution. His "New Democrat" Party co-opted the Reagan appeal to law and order, individualism, and welfare reform, and made the party more attractive to white middle-class Americans. At the same time, the reborn party retained traditional Democratic commitments to providing for the disadvantaged, regulating the excesses of the private market place, supporting minorities and women, and using government to stimulate economic growth. Moreover, Clinton capitalized on growing dissatisfaction with far right-wing extremism within the Republican Party. Nevertheless, Clinton's claims to a lasting, positive legacy for the Democratic Party have been severely undermined by two realities: the shift in control of Congress to the Republican Party on his watch and the loss by his would-be successor, Vice President Al Gore, in the 2000 presidential election. Thus, Clinton's partisan legacy remains complex and uncertain.[199]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c 17 days of the 103th Congress (January 3, 1993 – January 19, 1993) took place under President Bush, and 17 days of the 107th Congress (January 3, 2001 – January 19, 2001) took place during Clinton's second term.
  2. ^ a b With Democratic vice president Al Gore provides the tie-breaking vote, the Democrats also holding a majority in the Senate until January 20, 2001.
  3. ^ Bob Dole resigned as Senate Majority Leader on June 11, 1996. Trent Lott was elected to replace Dole as Senate Majority Leader on June 12, 1996.

References edit

  1. ^ Gil Troy, The Age of Clinton: America in the 1990s (2015) pp 8–9.
  2. ^ Rottinghaus, Brandon; Vaughn, Justin (February 16, 2015). "New ranking of U.S. presidents puts Lincoln at No. 1, Obama at 18; Kennedy judged most overrated". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  3. ^ Wilentz 2008, p. 317–319.
  4. ^ Wilentz 2008, p. 315–321.
  5. ^ Wilentz 2008, p. 321–322.
  6. ^ R. Michael Alvarez, and Jonathan Nagler, "Economics, entitlements, and social issues: Voter choice in the 1996 presidential election." American Journal of Political Science 42.4 (1998): 1349–1363 online.
  7. ^ Patterson 2005, p. 321.
  8. ^ John J. Pitney, "President Clinton's 1993 inaugural address." Presidential Studies Quarterly 27.1 (1997): 91–103. online
  9. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 27–28.
  10. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 21–22.
  11. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 4–5, 21.
  12. ^ Herring 2008, pp. 925–926.
  13. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 24–25.
  14. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 14–15.
  15. ^ Kelly, Michael (February 12, 1993). "Household Hiring Is Trickier With New Broom in Capital". The New York Times.
  16. ^ Harris, The Survivor, p. 16.
  17. ^ Troy 2015, p. 88.
  18. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 124–125.
  19. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 148–149, 158.
  20. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 254–255.
  21. ^ Herring 2008, p. 932.
  22. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 370–371.
  23. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 395–396.
  24. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 58–60.
  25. ^ Harris 2005, pp. 60–62.
  26. ^ Patterson 2005, pp. 330, 366.
  27. ^ Elizabeth Drew, On the Edge: The Clinton Presidency (1994) pp 114–122.
  28. ^ Troy 2015, pp. 82–83.
  29. ^ a b c Wilentz 2008, p. 327–328.
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Works cited edit

  • Gormley, Ken (2016). "Bill Clinton". In Gormley, Ken (ed.). The Presidents and the Constitution: A Living History. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 9781479839902.
  • Harris, John F. (2005). The Survivor: Bill Clinton in the White House. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-375-50847-3.
  • Herring, George C. (2008). From Colony to Superpower; U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1776. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507822-0.
  • Leshy, John D. "The Babbitt Legacy at the Department of the Interior: A Preliminary View." Environmental Law 31 (2001): 199–227 online
  • Palmer, David. "'What Might Have Been'--Bill Clinton and American Political Power." Australasian Journal of American Studies (2005): 38–58. online, summarizes scholarly studies
  • Patterson, James (2005). Restless Giant: The United States from Watergate to Bush v. Gore. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195122169.
  • Stephanopoulos, George (1999). All Too Human: A Political Education. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 0-316-92919-0.
  • Troy, Gil (2015). The Age of Clinton: America in the 1990s. Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 9781250063724.
  • Wilentz, Sean (2008). The Age of Reagan. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-074480-9.
  • Woodward, Bob (2000). Maestro. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Yeaman, Helena (2010). "The Bipartisan Roots of the Financial Services Crisis". Political Science Quarterly. 124 (4): 681–696. doi:10.1002/j.1538-165X.2009.tb00663.x. JSTOR 25655743.

Further reading edit

  • Albo, Gregory. "Neoliberalism from Reagan to Clinton." Monthly Review 52.11 (2001): 81–89, in USA online
  • Andelic, Patrick. Donkey Work: Congressional Democrats in Conservative America, 1974–1994 (2019) excerpt
  • Baker, Peter. The Breach: Inside the Impeachment and Trial of William Jefferson Clinton (2000) ISBN 0-684-86813-X
  • Carr, Richard. March of the Moderates: Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, and the Rebirth of Progressive Politics (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2019).
  • Cebul, Brent. "Supply-Side Liberalism: Fiscal Crisis, Post-Industrial Policy, and the Rise of the New Democrats." Modern American History 2.2 (2019): 139–164
  • Conley, Richard Steven. Historical dictionary of the Clinton era (2012) online
  • Congressional Quarterly. Congress and the Nation: A Review of Government and Politics. 1993–1996 (1998) 1275pp. online
  • Congressional Quarterly. Congress and the Nation: Volume 10: 1997–2001 (CQ Press, 2002) online
  • Dumbrell, John. Clinton's Foreign Policy: Between the Bushes, 1992–2000 (Routledge, 2009) 228pp excerpt
  • Ellison, James. "Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Tony Blair: The Search for Order." in The Palgrave Handbook of Presidents and Prime Ministers From Cleveland and Salisbury to Trump and Johnson (Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022) pp. 319–346.
  • Frankel, Jeffrey A. and Peter R. Orszag, eds. American Economic Policy in the 1990s (2002) introduction
  • Graff, Henry F., ed. The Presidents: A Reference History (3rd ed. 2002)
  • Hamilton, Nigel (2007). Bill Clinton: Mastering the Presidency. PublicAffairs. ISBN 9781586485160.
  • Halberstam, David. War in a time of peace: Bush, Clinton, and the generals (Simon and Schuster, 2001).
  • Harris, John F. The Survivor: Bill Clinton in the White House (2006). online
  • Herrnson, Paul S., and Dilys Hill. The Clinton presidency: the first term, 1992–96 (1999) online
  • Holzer, Harold. The Presidents Vs. the Press: The Endless Battle Between the White House and the Media—from the Founding Fathers to Fake News (Dutton, 2020) pp. 331–358. online
  • Klein, Joe (2002). The Natural: The Misunderstood Presidency of Bill Clinton. Doubleday. ISBN 0-7679-1412-0.
  • Lichtenstein, Nelson, and Judith Stein. A Fabulous Failure: The Clinton Presidency and the Transformation of American Capitalism (2023)
  • MacGinty, Roger. "American influences on the Northern Ireland peace process." Journal of Conflict Studies 17.2 (1997): 31–50 online.
  • Maney, Patrick J. (2016). Bill Clinton: New Gilded Age President. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700621941.
  • Nelson, Michael, et al. eds. 42: Inside the Presidency of Bill Clinton (Miller Center of Public Affairs Books, 2016) excerpt; also online, an analysis of interviews with insiders on Bosnia, Kosovo, Northern Ireland, and the Middle East.
  • Nelson, Michael. Clinton's Elections: 1992, 1996, and the Birth of a New Era of Governance (2020) excerpt
  • Perotti, Rosanna, ed. Foreign Policy in the Clinton Administration (2019)
  • Power, Samantha. A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide (2002) covers Bosnia, Kosovo, Srebenica, and Rwanda; Pulitzer Prize.online free to borrow
  • Renshon, Stanley, ed. The Clinton Presidency: Campaigning, Governing, and the Psychology of Leadership (2019) excerpt
  • Walt, Stephen M. "Two Cheers for Clinton's Foreign Policy" Foreign Affairs 79#2 (2000), pp. 63–79 online.
  • White, Mark J., ed. (2012). The Presidency of Bill Clinton: The Legacy of a New Domestic and Foreign Policy. I.B. Tauris.
  • Woodward, Bob. The Agenda: Inside the Clinton White House (1994) on economic policy-making in 1993. excerpt

Primary sources edit

  • Riley, Russell L. ed. Inside the Clinton White House: An Oral History (2016) excerpt
  • Rubinstein, Alvin Z. et al. The Clinton Foreign Policy Reader: Presidential Speeches with Commentary (M.E. Sharpe, 2000)

External links edit

  • Miller Center on the Presidency at U of Virginia, brief articles on Clinton and his presidency
  • Clinton White House archives
  • clintonlibrary42's channel on YouTube


presidency, bill, clinton, chronological, guide, timeline, bill, clinton, presidency, bill, clinton, tenure, 42nd, president, united, states, began, with, first, inauguration, january, 1993, ended, january, 2001, clinton, democrat, from, arkansas, took, office. For a chronological guide see Timeline of the Bill Clinton presidency Bill Clinton s tenure as the 42nd president of the United States began with his first inauguration on January 20 1993 and ended on January 20 2001 Clinton a Democrat from Arkansas took office following his victory over Republican incumbent president George H W Bush and independent businessman Ross Perot in the 1992 presidential election Four years later in the 1996 presidential election he defeated Republican nominee Bob Dole and Perot again then as the nominee of the Reform Party to win re election Clinton was limited to two terms and was succeeded by Republican George W Bush who won the 2000 presidential election Presidency of Bill Clinton January 20 1993 January 20 2001CabinetSee listPartyDemocraticElection19921996SeatWhite House George H W BushGeorge W Bush Seal of the presidentArchived website Library websiteThe nation experienced an extended period of economic prosperity during the Clinton presidency While the economy remained strong his presidency oscillated dramatically from high to low and back again which historian Gil Troy characterized in six Acts Act I in early 1993 was Bush League with amateurish distractions By mid 1993 Clinton had recovered to Act II passing a balanced budget and the NAFTA trade deal Act III 1994 saw the Republicans mobilizing under Newt Gingrich defeating his healthcare reforms and taking control of the House of Representatives for the first time in forty years 1995 to 1997 saw the comeback in Act IV with a triumphant reelection landslide However Act V the Lewinsky scandal and impeachment made 1998 a lost year Clinton concluded happily with Act VI by deregulating the banking system in 1999 1 Months into his first term he signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 which raised taxes and set the stage for future budget surpluses He signed the bipartisan Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act and won ratification of the North American Free Trade Agreement despite opposition from trade unions and environmentalists Clinton s most ambitious legislative initiative a plan to provide universal health care faltered it never had majority support in Congress due to the Republican Revolution In the 1994 elections the Republican Revolution swept the country Clinton vetoed many of the Republican policies such as abortion restrictions He assembled a bipartisan coalition to pass welfare reform and successfully expanded health insurance for children In foreign policy Clinton initiated a bombing campaign in the Balkans which led to the creation of a United Nations protectorate in Kosovo He played a major role of the expansion of NATO into former Eastern Bloc countries and remained on positive terms with Russian President Boris Yeltsin During his second term Clinton presided over the deregulation of the financial and telecommunications industry Clinton s second term also saw the first federal budget surpluses since the 1960s Clinton s budget surplus was reversed by the overspending of George W Bush which led to the current 33 trillion in national debt The ratio of debt held by the public to GDP also fell from 47 8 in 1993 to 33 6 by 2000 His impeachment in 1998 arose after he denied claims of having an affair with a White House intern Monica Lewinsky under oath He was acquitted of all charges by the Senate He appointed Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer to the U S Supreme Court Clinton left office with high approval ratings though his preferred successor Vice President Al Gore was narrowly defeated in the Electoral College by George W Bush in the 2000 presidential election in spite of Gore winning the popular vote Historians and political scientists have tended to rank Clinton as an above average president 2 Contents 1 1992 election 2 Administration 3 Judicial appointments 3 1 Supreme Court 3 2 Other courts 4 Domestic affairs 4 1 Budget 4 1 1 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 4 1 2 Government shutdowns 4 1 3 Line item veto 4 1 4 Budget surplus 4 2 Health care 4 2 1 1993 health care plan 4 2 2 Other health care legislation 4 3 Welfare reform 4 3 1 Other welfare 4 4 Economy 4 5 Deregulation 4 6 Gay rights 4 7 Abortion 4 8 Firearms 4 9 Environmentalism 4 10 Agriculture 4 11 Education 4 12 Health 4 13 Community reinvestment 4 14 Other policies 4 14 1 Copyright 4 14 2 Pardons 5 Foreign affairs 5 1 Trade 5 2 Irish peace talks 5 3 Military interventions 5 3 1 Somalia 5 3 2 Rwanda 5 3 3 Haiti 5 4 Balkans Serbia Bosnia 5 5 Kosovo 5 6 NATO and Russia 5 7 Terrorism 5 8 North Korea 5 9 Middle East 5 10 Mexico 5 11 Other issues 6 Impeachment and acquittal 7 Elections during the Clinton presidency 7 1 1994 mid term elections 7 2 1996 re election campaign 7 3 1998 mid term elections 7 4 2000 elections and transition period 8 Evaluation and legacy 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Works cited 13 Further reading 13 1 Primary sources 14 External links1992 election editMain articles Bill Clinton 1992 presidential campaign and 1992 United States presidential election Further information 1992 United States elections 1992 Democratic Party presidential primaries and 1992 Democratic National Convention nbsp 1992 Electoral College vote results nbsp Outgoing President George H W Bush and President elect Bill Clinton on November 18 1992President George H W Bush s popularity in the aftermath of the successful 1991 Gulf War convinced many prominent Democrats to sit out the 1992 presidential election With party leaders like Mario Cuomo and Dick Gephardt staying out of the running the 1992 Democratic primary field consisted of relatively unknown candidates Among those who sought the Democratic nomination were former Senator Paul Tsongas of Massachusetts former Governor Jerry Brown of California and Bill Clinton who had served as the Governor of Arkansas since 1983 Clinton emerged as the front runner for the nomination after the first set of primaries in February 1992 A founding member of the centrist Democratic Leadership Council Clinton overcame opposition from more liberal Democrats like Brown and clinched the Democratic nomination in April 1992 3 Bush defeated a challenge from conservative commentator Pat Buchanan to win his party s nomination Meanwhile independent candidate Ross Perot a billionaire businessman from Texas emerged as a major factor in the race Perot ran a populist campaign that focused on voters disillusioned with both parties and he emphasized his opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement and his desire to balance the federal budget Polls taken in early June 1992 showed Bush leading the race followed by Perot and then Clinton From July to September Perot temporarily dropped out of the race causing severe damage to his candidacy At the 1992 Democratic National Convention Clinton selected Senator Al Gore of Tennessee as his running mate and the successful convention helped unify Democrats behind Clinton While the 1992 Republican National Convention placed a heavy emphasis on social issues Clinton s campaign focused on the state of the economy which was still emerging from the early 1990s recession 4 On election day Clinton won 43 of the popular vote and a wide majority in the Electoral College Bush won 37 4 of the popular vote while Perot took 18 9 the strongest showing by a third party or independent presidential candidate since the 1912 election Later studies showed that Perot drew his voters roughly equally from Clinton and Bush Clinton s victory included a sweep of the Northeastern United States and he also won several states in the Midwest the West and the South 5 By far voters disappointment with the economy was the major favor in voting against the incumbent with abortion a lesser factor 6 In the concurrent congressional elections Democrats retained control of both houses of Congress 7 Clinton used his inaugural address to deal with his uncertain mandate from the voters and lack of national experience He drew heavily upon his lifelong study of the Protestant Bible his education at Catholic Georgetown University and the inaugural addresses of Ronald Reagan Richard Nixon John Kennedy Jimmy Carter and Woodrow Wilson 8 Administration editSee also Presidential transition of Bill Clinton nbsp President Bill Clinton and his cabinet in 1993 The Clinton cabinetOfficeNameTermPresidentBill Clinton1993 2001Vice PresidentAl Gore1993 2001Secretary of StateWarren Christopher1993 1997Madeleine Albright1997 2001Secretary of the TreasuryLloyd Bentsen1993 1994Robert Rubin1995 1999Lawrence Summers1999 2001Secretary of DefenseLes Aspin1993 1994William Perry1994 1997William Cohen1997 2001Attorney GeneralJanet Reno1993 2001Secretary of the InteriorBruce Babbitt1993 2001Secretary of AgricultureMike Espy1993 1994Dan Glickman1995 2001Secretary of CommerceRon Brown1993 1996Mickey Kantor1996 1997William M Daley1997 2000Norman Mineta2000 2001Secretary of LaborRobert Reich1993 1997Alexis Herman1997 2001Secretary of Health andHuman ServicesDonna Shalala1993 2001Secretary of Housing andUrban DevelopmentHenry Cisneros1993 1997Andrew Cuomo1997 2001Secretary of TransportationFederico Pena1993 1997Rodney Slater1997 2001Secretary of EnergyHazel O Leary1993 1997Federico Pena1997 1998Bill Richardson1998 2001Secretary of EducationRichard Riley1993 2001Secretary of Veterans AffairsJesse Brown1993 1997Togo West1998 2000Hershel Gober acting 2000 2001Administrator of theEnvironmental Protection AgencyCarol Browner1993 2001Director of the Office ofManagement and BudgetLeon Panetta1993 1994Alice Rivlin1994 1996Franklin Raines1996 1998Jack Lew1998 2001Director of Central IntelligenceJames Woolsey1993 1995John M Deutch 1995 1996George Tenet1996 2001United States Trade RepresentativeMickey Kantor1993 1996Charlene Barshefsky1996 2001Ambassador to the United NationsMadeleine Albright1993 1997Bill Richardson1997 1998Richard Holbrooke1999 2001Chair of theCouncil of Economic AdvisersLaura Tyson1993 1995Joseph Stiglitz1995 1997Janet Yellen1997 1999Martin N Baily1999 2001Administrator of theSmall Business AdministrationErskine Bowles1993 1994Philip Lader 1994 1997Aida Alvarez1997 2001Director of the FederalEmergency Management AgencyJames Witt 1993 2001Director of the Office ofNational Drug Control PolicyLee Brown1993 1996Barry McCaffrey1996 2001Chief of StaffMack McLarty1993 1994Leon Panetta1994 1997Erskine Bowles1997 1998John Podesta1998 2001 Elevated to cabinet level in May 1995 Elevated to cabinet level in October 1994 Elevated to cabinet level in February 1996Mack McLarty a long time friend of Clinton who had led a successful business career and had served as the chairman of the Arkansas Democratic Party became Clinton s first chief of staff 9 Clinton convinced Lloyd Bentsen a longtime Senator from Texas and the 1988 Democratic vice presidential nominee to serve as his first Secretary of the Treasury 10 At the start of Clinton s first term Bentsen OMB Director Leon Panetta Secretary of Labor Robert Reich and policy coordinator Robert Rubin were Clinton s top economic advisers 11 Clinton s first term foreign policy team was led by National Security Advisor Anthony Lake and Secretary of State Warren Christopher both of whom had served in the Carter administration 12 Vice President Gore and First Lady Hillary Clinton emerged as two of the most influential figures of the Clinton administration and Clinton solicited their opinions on a wide range of issues 13 Clinton decided to appoint the first female Attorney General settling on little known corporate lawyer Zoe Baird In what became known as the Nannygate matter the Senate Judiciary Committee revealed that Baird had hired a Peruvian couple both undocumented immigrants to work in her home 14 Baird withdrew her nomination and Clinton next chose Kimba Wood who was quickly forced to withdraw due to somewhat similar problems 15 Janet Reno a Florida state s attorney was nominated for Attorney General a few weeks later and she won confirmation in March 1993 16 After experiencing difficulty with these nominations as well as that of Lani Guinier Clinton brought in David Gergen who had previously served in Republican administrations to serve as Counselor to the President 17 Secretary of Defense Les Aspin resigned in the aftermath of the Battle of Mogadishu and was succeeded by William Perry 18 Bentsen and McLarty also left office in 1994 and they were replaced by Rubin and Panetta respectively 19 After Clinton s re election Panetta stepped down and was replaced by former deputy chief of staff Erskine Bowles 20 Madeleine Albright became the first female Secretary of State Sandy Berger succeeded Lake as National Security Adviser and former Republican Senator William Cohen became the Secretary of Defense 21 According to reporter John Harris Berger s close rapport with Clinton made him the leading foreign policy figure of Clinton s second term as well as the most influential National Security Advisor since Henry Kissinger 22 John Podesta assumed the position of Chief of Staff in 1998 while Lawrence Summers replaced Rubin as Treasury Secretary in 1999 23 Judicial appointments editSupreme Court edit Main article Bill Clinton Supreme Court candidates Clinton appointed two justices to the Supreme Court The first vacancy arose in March 1993 when Associate Justice Byron White informed Clinton of his impending retirement Clinton considered various nominating political leaders like Mario Cuomo and Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt whom he believed could become leaders on the court in a similar fashion to Earl Warren 24 After weeks of consideration Clinton began to favor appointing an experienced jurist and he conducted interviews with Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg both of whom served as federal appellate judges Clinton announced Ginsburg s nomination in June 1993 and she was confirmed by the Senate two months later making her the second woman to serve on the Supreme Court alongside Sandra Day O Connor 25 Harry Blackmun retired in 1994 and Clinton successfully nominated Breyer to succeed Blackmun The appointments did not greatly affect the ideological balance of the Rehnquist Court as conservatives continued to hold a narrow majority on the Supreme Court 26 Other courts edit Further information List of federal judges appointed by Bill Clinton and Bill Clinton judicial appointment controversies Clinton also appointed 66 judges to the United States Courts of Appeals and 305 judges to the United States district courts Among Clinton s appellate appointees were future Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor as well as Merrick Garland who was nominated to the Supreme Court in 2016 though his nomination was never acted on by the Senate Garland would later go on to become Attorney General under Joe Biden in 2021 Domestic affairs editBudget edit Clinton proposed a 16 billion stimulus package primarily to aid inner city programs desired by liberals but it was defeated by a Republican filibuster in the Senate 27 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 edit Clinton inherited major budget deficits left over from the Reagan and Bush administrations fiscal year 1992 had seen a 290 billion deficit In order to cut the deficit Bentsen Panetta and Rubin urged Clinton to pursue both tax increases and spending cuts They argued that by taming the deficit Clinton would encourage Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan to lower interest rates which along with increased confidence among investors would lead to an economic boom Some of Clinton s advisers also believed that a focus on cutting the deficit would be politically beneficial since it would potentially help Democrats shed their supposed tax and spend reputation 28 Though Secretary of Labor Robert Reich argued that stagnant earnings represented a bigger economic issue than the deficits Clinton decided to pursue deficit reduction as the major economic priority of his first year in office 29 In doing so he reluctantly abandoned a middle class tax cut that he had championed during the campaign 30 Clinton presented his budget plan to Congress in February 1993 proposing a mix of tax increases and spending reductions that would cut the deficit in half by 1997 31 Republican leaders strongly opposed any tax increase and they pressured congressional Republicans to unite in opposition to Clinton s budget 32 and not a single Republican would vote in favor of Clinton s proposed bill 29 Senate Democrats eliminated the implementation of a new energy tax in favor of an increase in the gasoline tax but Clinton successfully resisted efforts to defeat his proposed expansion of the earned income tax credit 33 By narrow margins the Senate and the House of Representatives both passed versions of Clinton s budget bill and a conference committee settled the differences between the House and Senate The House passed the final bill in a 218 216 vote After intensely lobbying Bob Kerrey and other Democratic senators Clinton won passage of his bill in the Senate in 50 50 tie vote Vice President Gore broke the tie Clinton signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 OBRA 93 into law on August 10 1993 34 The bill provided for 255 billion in spending cuts over a five year period with much of those cuts affecting Medicare and the military It also provided for 241 billion in new revenue over five years most of that revenue came from an increased gasoline tax or from higher taxes on those who made over 100 000 per year 35 Government shutdowns edit Main article United States federal government shutdowns of 1995 1996 After Republicans took control of Congress in the 1994 elections incoming Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich promised a conservative revolution that would implement tax cuts welfare reform and major domestic spending cuts 36 Gingrich failed to deliver major conservative reforms in the first hundred days of the 104th Congress but many observers continued to wonder if the Speaker would seize stewardship over domestic policy from the office of the president 37 Meanwhile with conservatism on the rise and New Deal liberalism in retreat Clinton hoped to forge a new consensus that did not totally reject government interventionism 38 In reaction to his party s electoral defeat Clinton hired consultant Dick Morris who advocated that Clinton pursue a policy of triangulation between conservative Republicans and liberal Democrats By co opting some of Republican ideas Morris argued that Clinton could boost his own popularity while blocking the possibility of the drastic reforms advocated by some conservatives 38 The Republican Congress presented Clinton with a budget plan that cut Medicare spending and instituted major tax cuts for the wealthy giving him a November 14 1995 deadline to approve the bill After the deadline the government would be forced to temporarily shut down due to a lack of funding In reaction Clinton presented his own plan that did not include spending cuts to Medicare but would balance the budget by 2005 As Clinton refused to sign the Republican bill major portions of the government suspended operations until Congress enacted a stopgap measure 39 The government shut down again on December 16 after Clinton vetoed a Republican budget proposal that would have extended tax cuts to the wealthy cut spending on social programs and shifted control of Medicaid to the states After a 21 day government shutdown Republicans in danger of being seen as extremists by many in the public accepted Clinton s budget 40 Line item veto edit Further information Line item veto in the United States Clinton secured passage of the Line Item Veto Act of 1996 becoming the first president to obtain that power although many had sought it Its effect was very brief as the act was soon ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in Clinton v City of New York 41 Budget surplus edit See also History of the United States public debt nbsp Gross US Federal Debt as a Percentage of GDP by political party of PresidentCombined with a strong economy the 1993 deficit reduction plan produced smaller budget deficits each year With the improving state of the federal budget Clinton and congressional Republicans reached a budget agreement in 1997 that provided for relatively small changes to the budget In 1998 the federal government experienced the first budget surplus since the 1960s Reflecting the importance of the budget surplus the New York Times described the end of budget deficits as the fiscal equivalent of the fall of the Berlin Wall 42 Though Republican leaders called for large tax cuts in light of the budgetary surplus Clinton successfully resisted any major budgetary changes in the last three years of his term 43 In 1997 Clinton agreed to a deal with Republicans that lowered the tax rate on capital gains to 18 percent implemented a 500 child tax credit increased funding for children s health care and raised the federal cigarette tax from 24 cents per pack to 39 cents per pack 44 Republicans did however block some of Clinton s favored policies including an increase of the federal minimum wage and legislation designed to provide free prescription drugs to seniors 45 Health care edit 1993 health care plan edit Further information Clinton health care plan of 1993 When Clinton took office approximately twenty percent of American adults lacked health insurance despite the fact that the United States spent more on health care than other developed countries 1 46 Many liberals advocated the establishment of a single payer healthcare system similar to that of Canada while a group of congressional Republicans developed a plan consisting of government subsidies and the implementation of a mandate that would require individuals to purchase health insurance 46 The administration formed a task force led by First Lady Hillary Clinton that was charged with creating a plan that would provide for universal health care Assigning a major policy role to the First Lady was unprecedented and sparked controversy 47 Rejecting calls for a single payer system she proposed a health care plan based on the extension of employer based health insurance Individuals not insured by employers would be insured by the government 48 The plan would also expand the government s regulatory role in a concept known as managed competition with the government setting a minimum level of benefits that each plan could provide Additionally the plan would prevent insurers from charging different rates to customers based on age and pre existing conditions 49 After winning the passage of OBRA 93 and the ratification of NAFTA in 1993 the President made health care his major area of legislative focus in 1994 50 Though many corporations supported Clinton s health care proposal in hopes of reducing their own costs several other groups strongly objected to the plan Liberals criticized Clinton for not proposing more far reaching reforms while conservatives attacked the expansion of government Interest groups ran ad campaigns alleging that the Clinton health care bill would lead to health care rationing reduced choices and increased costs 51 The Health Insurance Association of America s Harry and Louise ad campaign proved especially important in influencing the public against the Clinton health care bill 52 Meanwhile Congressmen Newt Gingrich and columnist Bill Kristol convinced congressional Republicans to resist any form of compromise Clinton s decision not to engage congressional Democrats and moderate Republicans early in 1993 and his own refusal to compromise on various aspects of the bill further damaged any hope of passing a major health care bill With Republicans unified against his plan and with his own party divided Clinton decided to abandon health care reform in September 1994 53 Other health care legislation edit Within a month of taking office Clinton signed the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 The act which had been vetoed twice by Bush guaranteed workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid medical leave for certain medical and family reasons including pregnancy 29 In August 1996 Clinton signed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act The bipartisan bill granted people the right to keep their insurance plan if they changed jobs and also contained several other health care reforms 54 In October 1996 Senator Ted Kennedy introduced a bill to provide health care coverage for children of the working poor to be financed via a 75 cents a pack cigarette tax increase 55 Working with Clinton and Republican Senator Orrin Hatch Kennedy won passage of the Children s Health Insurance Program in 1997 56 Welfare reform edit Further information Triangulation politics The successful passage of welfare reform in the 1990s was President Clinton s strategy of triangulation purposely positioning himself midway between liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans thereby building a majority coalition and enabling him to take full credit for the results The strategy was called triangulation 57 58 Shortly after the end of the government shutdown Clinton announced his plan to pursue major changes to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children AFDC program which provided financial assistance to low income families with children Clinton believed that the program inadvertently trapped many poor families and individuals in a cycle of poverty and he favored shifting funding from AFDC to job training and child care programs 59 Republicans shared Clinton s goal of making major changes to the welfare system but they were unwilling to fund the job training programs and wanted to prevent legal immigrants from receiving welfare benefits 60 Clinton twice vetoed Republican plans that terminated AFDC but he ultimately decided that he favored the Republican reform plan over no reform at all In July 1996 Clinton signed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act which terminated AFDC In its place the bill created the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families TANF program which imposed new work requirements for and lifetime limits on aid recipients and shifted responsibility for the administration of the programs to the states 59 Due in part to the improving economy and the expansion of the earned income tax credit the number of Americans receiving cash public assistance declined from 12 2 million in 1996 to 5 3 million in 2001 61 Commentators have sometimes speculated that Clinton s emphasis on entrepreneurship and the post industrial sector was the co option of conservative ideas first presented by Reagan Republicans in the 1980s 62 However Brent Cebul argues that triangulation represented a traditional liberal effort to structure the economy with the goals of creating new jobs and producing fresh tax revenues that can support progressive policy innovations This tradition goes back to the local and state policies inspired by the New Deal and the supply side liberalism of the 1970s 63 Other welfare edit In 1993 substantive changes were made to food stamps 64 while the HUD Demonstration Act of 1993 authorized several demonstrations including an Innovative Homeless Initiatives Demonstration program the section 8 pension fund demonstration and the NCDI program 65 A Direct Student Loan Program was introduced along with an Early Head Start program for children aged 0 to 3 and a Community Development Financial Institutions CDFI Fund to support both specialized financial institutions and traditional banks serving lower income communities In addition the Medicare Benefit Package was expanded 66 The Earned Income Tax Credit was expanded to give a larger benefit to working families and allow childless workers to benefit as well In 1996 Congress passed a 20 increase in the minimum wage which boosted earnings for nearly 10 million Americans As part of the Clinton Administration s welfare reforms over 200 000 people on welfare received housing vouchers to help them move closer to jobs while a welfare to work tax credit encouraged businesses to hire long term welfare recipients In addition communities received federal support to design transportation solutions to help low income workers get to work Better nutritional support was provided for low income families with Congress under Clinton s watch increasing federal support for several critical nutritional and housing support programs The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women Infants and Children went from average annual funding levels of 2 7 billion in the eight years before Clinton took office to 3 9 billion under his presidency while the Food Stamp program went from an average of 21 3 billion a year to 24 9 billion In terms of housing funding for federal housing assistance grew from an average of 20 4 billion a year in the eight years before Clinton s term to an average of 29 billion a year during his presidency In 1997 a child tax credit was introduced that directly reduced a family s income tax bill by 500 per eligible child In addition federal funding for the Head Start program rose from 3 3 billion in constant 2000 dollars to 5 3 billion in 2000 67 In 1993 AmeriCorps was established a community service program that provided young people with an opportunity to serve their communities and earn money for college or skills training In just five years nearly 200 000 young people were enrolled in the program Economy edit Main article Economic policy of the Bill Clinton administration See also 1990s United States boom and Monetary policy of the United States Federal finances and GDP during Clinton s presidency 68 Fiscalyear Receipts Outlays Surplus deficit GDP Debt as a of GDP 69 1993 1 154 3 1 409 4 255 1 6 775 3 47 91994 1 258 6 1 461 8 203 2 7 176 9 47 81995 1 351 8 1 515 7 164 0 7 560 4 47 71996 1 453 1 1 560 5 107 4 7 951 3 47 01997 1 579 2 1 601 1 21 9 8 451 0 44 61998 1 721 7 1 652 5 69 3 8 930 8 41 71999 1 827 5 1 701 8 125 6 9 479 4 38 32000 2 025 2 1 789 0 236 2 10 117 5 33 72001 1 991 1 1 862 8 128 2 10 526 5 31 5Ref 70 71 72 nbsp Budget deficits and surpluses in billions of dollars 1971 2001Clinton presided over a Goldilocks economy a period of low inflation and low unemployment 73 During the 1990s the Dow Jones Industrial Average quadrupled and the share of families with investments in stocks rose from 32 percent in 1989 to 51 percent in 2001 74 Income inequality also grew as the richest households earned a higher proportion of the total income 75 Nonetheless median household income adjusted for inflation to 2000 dollars grew from 38 262 in 1995 to 42 151 in 2000 By 2000 the unemployment rate had declined to four percent while the poverty rate had declined to 11 3 percent 73 David Greenberg a professor of history and media studies at Rutgers University argued that By the end of the Clinton presidency the numbers were uniformly impressive Besides the record high surpluses and the record low poverty rates the economy could boast the longest economic expansion in history the lowest unemployment since the early 1970s and the lowest poverty rates for single mothers black Americans and the aged 76 Clinton proposed a 30 billion economic stimulus package in his first year in office but his proposal was blocked by Senate Republicans and he would be unable to win the passage of any similar proposal for the remainder of his presidency Clinton held office at a time when monetarism had supplanted Keynesianism as the dominant theory of economic growth among many in Washington Under the theory of monetarism Clinton s fiscal policies would have relatively little impact on the economy Instead monetarists contended that the economy was guided by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors a group of appointed officials who set monetary policy Throughout Clinton s presidency Alan Greenspan served as the chairman of the Federal Reserve and he emerged as an especially prominent public figure as the economy improved in mid to late 1990s 77 Though much of the credit for the strong economy was assigned to Greenspan the Clinton administration also basked in the approval of Americans who enjoyed the benefits of a strong economy and good economic conditions helped Clinton remain popular despite controversies over his personal life 78 Deregulation edit Further information Deregulation United States Clinton presided over a period of deregulation in the telecommunications and financial industries In 1999 Clinton signed into law the Gramm Leach Bliley Act GLBA The act repealed a provision of the New Deal s Glass Steagall Act of 1933 that had required banks to either classify themselves as either commercial bank which were subject to federal oversight and protections like deposit insurance or as investment banks which faced less regulations but did not benefit from federal protections The financial services industry had attempted to repeal this provision of the GLBA since the 1980s and they were finally successful due to cooperation from Secretary of the Treasury Rubin and Clintonians who believed that the financial industry needed looser regulation in order for it to remain competitive globally 79 The bill passed both houses of Congress with only minimal resistance Opposition to the plan came primarily from liberals like Senator Paul Wellstone who feared that looser banking regulations would lead to financial crises 80 Shortly before leaving office Clinton signed the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 which deregulated trading of derivatives The bill also included the Enron loophole which lessened regulation of energy trading by companies such as Enron 81 Clinton also signed the Telecommunications Act of 1996 which represented the first major overhaul of the Communications Act of 1934 82 Gay rights edit Clinton supported the right of homosexual individuals to serve in the military and along with Secretary of Defense Les Aspin he developed a plan that would allow openly gay individuals to serve in the military Clinton s proposal received strong pushback from military leaders especially Marine Commandant Carl Epting Mundy Jr In response General Colin Powell suggested a compromise solution in which the military would not ask recruits about their sexual orientation but would retain the right to discharge those who were gay Clinton resisted the compromise policy which became known as don t ask don t tell but congressional leaders of both parties made it clear that they would reverse any executive order allowing gay individuals to openly serve in the military 83 Clinton ultimately accepted the don t ask don t tell policy and over the ensuing ten years approximately 10 000 people were discharged from the military after they revealed their homosexuality 84 In September 1996 Clinton signed the Defense of Marriage Act which denied federal recognition to same sex marriages 85 though it had passed with a veto proof majority and he called the law unnecessary and divisive 86 87 Abortion edit On taking office Clinton revoked a gag order that had prevented abortion counseling in federally funded clinics He also signed an executive order allowing the use of fetal tissue in medical research These early policies moves signaled Clinton s break with the socially conservative policies of his predecessors 88 Clinton also signed the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act which made it a federal crime to obstruct abortion clinics and places of worship 89 In April 1996 Clinton vetoed a bill to prohibit late or partial birth abortion calling the procedure potentially life saving and arguing that the small group of women likely to be affected should not become pawns Catholic bishops condemned his move 90 Clinton vetoed another such law in 1997 91 Republicans later passed the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act which was signed by President George W Bush in 2003 In October 1996 Clinton signed into law the Amber Hangerman Child Protection Act which created the child abduction AMBER Alert system for news stations and the national sex offender registry 92 93 Firearms edit In November 1993 Clinton signed the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act which required a background check for gun purchasers 94 In 1994 Clinton signed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act which included a provision known as the Federal Assault Weapons Ban The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act provided funding for 100 000 local law enforcement officials and established a federal three strikes law that enhanced criminal penalties for repeat offenders 95 The Federal Assault Weapons Ban barred the sale of several kinds of Semi automatic rifles but the provision did not apply to the 1 5 million semi automatic rifles already in the possession of private owners nor did it affect other types of guns 96 Environmentalism edit Liberal Democrats gave environmentalism a higher priority than the economy focused Clinton did 97 The Clinton administration responded to public demand for environmental protection 98 Clinton created 17 national monuments by executive order prohibiting commercial activities such as logging mining and drilling for oil or gas 99 Clinton also imposed a permanent freeze on drilling in maritime sanctuaries 100 Other presidential and departmental orders protected various wetlands and coastal resources and extended the existing moratorium on new oil leases off the coast line through 2013 101 After the Republican victory in the 1994 elections Clinton vetoed a series of budget bills that contained amendments designed to scale back environmental restrictions 102 Clinton boasted that his administration adopted the strongest air quality protections ever improved the safety of our drinking water and food cleaned up about three times as many toxic waste sites as the two previous administrations combined and helped to promote a new generation of fuel efficient vehicles and vehicles that run on alternative fuels 103 Vice President Gore was keenly concerned with global climate change and Clinton created the President s Council on Sustainable Development In November 1998 Clinton signed the Kyoto Protocol an international agreement in which developed countries committed to reducing carbon emissions However the Senate refused to ratify it since the agreement did not apply to the rapidly growing emissions of developing countries such as China India and Indonesia 104 The key person on environmental issues was Bruce Babbitt the former head of the League of Conservation Voters who served for all eight years as Clinton s Secretary of the Interior According to John D Leshy His most remembered legacies will likely be his advocacy of environmental restoration his efforts to safeguard and build support for the ESA Endangered Species Act of 1973 and the biodiversity that it helps protect And the public land conservation measures that flowered on his watch 105 The Interior Department worked to protect scenic and historic areas of America s federal public lands In 2000 Babbitt created the National Landscape Conservation System a collection of 15 U S National Monuments and 14 National Conservation Areas to be managed by the Bureau of Land Management in such a way as to keep them healthy open and wild A major issue involved low fees charged ranchers who grazed cattle on public lands The animal unit month AUM fee was only 1 35 and was far below the 1983 market value The argument was that the federal government in effect was subsidizing ranchers with a few major corporations controlling millions of acres of grazing land Babbitt and Oklahoma Congressman Mike Synar tried to rally environmentalists and raise fees but senators from the Western United States successfully blocked their proposals 106 107 Agriculture edit Although Governor Clinton had a large farm base in Arkansas as president he sharply cut support for farmers and raised taxes on tobacco 108 At one high level policy meeting budget expert Alice Rivlin told the president she had a new slogan for his reelection campaign I m going to end welfare as we know it for farmers Clinton was annoyed and retorted Farmers are good people I know we have to do these things We re going to make these cuts But we don t have to feel good about it 109 With exports accounting for more than a fourth of farm output farm organizations joined business interests to defeat human rights activists regarding Most Favored Nation MFN trade status for China They took the position that major tariff increases would hurt importers and consumers They warned that China would retaliate to hurt American exporters They wanted more liberal trade policies and less attention to Chinese human rights abuses 110 Environmentalists began taking a keen interest in agricultural policies The feared that farming had a growing negative impact on the environment in terms of soil erosion and the destruction of wetlands The expanding use of pesticides and fertilizers polluted soil and water not just on each farm but downstream into rivers and lakes and urban areas as well 111 Education edit In the eight years before Clinton took office federal funding for primary and secondary education averaged 8 5 billion a year but over Clinton s two terms that average rose to 11 1 billion The considerable increase in funding was supported by the Improving America s Schools Act of 1994 which reauthorized the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 The goals were to improve accountability in schools and help low income students succeed while giving schools new authority to incorporate technology into curricula so that every student would be able to benefit from the technology revolution and contribute to its next wave Federal support for higher education was also expanded with the maximum Pell Grant award increased and funding levels for student financial assistance increased by 20 by the end of Clinton s term The 1993 Student Loan Reform Act introduced direct federal student loans leading to both lower borrowing costs for students and billions in savings for the federal government In 1997 two tax credits were passed to help defray the costs of higher education the Hope Scholarship tax credit and the Lifetime Learning tax credit Federal funding for scientific research was boosted with funding for the National Science Foundation increased by more than 30 and the annual budget for the Department of Energy s Office of Science nearly doubled to 2 8 billion 67 The GEAR UP college preparation program launched in 1998 started to provide federal grants to high poverty middle schools and high schools All students within those schools were provided with services to help them succeed in school and enter college and as of 2000 2001 200 000 students were served by GEAR UP 112 To increase Internet access and reduce the digital divide funding for Community Technology Centers which were located in urban and rural neighborhoods that had little or no Internet access was tripled Expanded Educational technology was expanded with the amount spent on educational technology increased from 27 million in 1994 to 769 million by 2000 and as part of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 Clinton won the inclusion of E Rate which subsidized Internet access for schools and libraries Health edit In the eight years before Clinton took office the National Institutes of Health spent an average of 9 billion a year but under Clinton Congress boosted NIH funding by 40 percent to average 12 7 billion annually By 2000 federal NIH funding had surpassed 15 billion a year a 50 increase over NIH spending when Clinton first took office and the highest level of research funding ever spent on research on health and disease Community reinvestment edit Under Clinton s direction lenders covered under the Community Reinvestment Act stepped up their efforts with 1993 to 1999 banks and thrifts subject to CRA making 800 billion in sustainable home mortgage small business and community development loans to low and moderate income borrowers and communities from 1993 to 1999 In 2001 the New Markets and Community Renewal initiative was passed by Congress which invested 25 billion in new incentives for growth in low income communities to create nine new Empowerment Zones bringing the total created under Clinton to 40 The low income housing tax credit was increased to build an additional 700 000 units of affordable housing and the New Markets Tax Credit was created which encouraged venture capital firms to support small business startups and rural development In addition 40 Renewal Communities were created with targeted pro growth tax benefits to spur robust outside investment As a means of creating a nationwide network of community development banks the Treasury Department s Community Development Financial Institutions Fund was established By 2000 the CDFI Fund had issued 436 million in total grants loans equity investments and technical assistance to local financial institutions banks and thrifts which increased their community development activities by upward of 2 4 billion 67 In 1999 the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act designed to help beneficiaries of SSI who wished to work to join the workforce without losing their Medicaid benefits was signed into law 113 Responding to declining home ownership rates for low income families Clinton sought to reform the Community Reinvestment Act CRA to encourage banks to make loans to inhabitants of low income areas The administration implemented new rules that would prevent banks from expanding if they failed to meet benchmarks for loans to low income areas Between 1993 and 1998 CRA lending increased at a faster rate than other loans and home values in many CRA areas rose Banks implemented new strategies designed to cater to lower income borrowers including the adjustable rate mortgage 114 This effort was part of a broader initiative the National Homeownership Strategy which helped increase the share of Americans who owned their own homes from 64 percent to 67 4 percent during Clinton s presidency Many of the sub prime mortgages that allowed Americans to purchase homes would later play a role in sparking the Financial crisis of 2007 2008 115 Other policies edit See also National Voter Registration Act of 1993 Copyright edit The Digital Millennium Copyright Act enacted by Clinton on October 21 1998 served as the first significant amendment to the Copyright Act since 1976 The DMCA provided a framework for sound recording copyright owners and recording artists to seek public performance royalties under statute which proved to be a landmark achievement for the recording industry citation needed The law included a provision reiterating the fair use of copyrighted materials and another provision that exempted internet service providers from responsibility for inadvertently transmitting copyrighted works 116 That same month Clinton also signed the Copyright Term Extension Act which retroactively extended copyright protection and stopped copyrighted works entering into the public domain for an extra twenty years 117 Pardons edit Pardongate was the Bill Clinton pardon controversy when critics attacked his manner of giving out 450 pardons a third of them on his last day in office 118 Scholars use two different models to describe the pardons process Clinton used the presidential model viewing the pardon power as a convenient resource to be used to help party activists or to advance specific policy goals Critics favored the agency model which views the pardons process as a nonpolitical matter for legal experts in the Department of Justice An investigation found that he was legally within his rights 119 Foreign affairs editMain article Foreign policy of the Bill Clinton administration nbsp Clinton made 54 international trips to 73 different countries during his presidency 120 Critics agree that foreign policy was not a high priority for Clinton and his administration According to Harvard Professor Stephen Walt 121 Critics on the right argue that he is too eager to accommodate a rising China too blind to Russia s corruption and cronyism and too slow to use force against states like Yugoslavia or Iraq On the left liberals bemoan Clinton s failure to prevent the genocide in Rwanda his tardy response to the bloodletting in the Balkans and his abandonment of his early pledge to build a multilateral world order grounded in stronger international institutions Even pragmatic centrists find him wanting deriding his foreign policy as social work that is too easily swayed by ethnic lobbies public opinion polls and media buzz Walt however gives two cheers for Clinton s realism and his accomplishments 122 Under Clinton the United States consolidated its Cold War victory by bringing three former Warsaw Pact members into its own alliance It shored up its alliances in East Asia and readied itself for a possible competition with a rising China while encouraging Beijing to accept a status quo that favored the United States It forced its allies to bear a greater share of the burden in Europe and East Asia while insisting on leading both alliances And together with its NATO allies it asserted the right to intervene in the sovereign territory of other states even without Security Council authorization Clinton may cloak U S policy in the rhetoric of world order and general global interests but its defining essence remains the unilateral exercise of sovereign power Trade edit See also History of globalization and Anti globalization movement nbsp Remarks on the Signing of NAFTA December 8 1993 source source source source Clinton s December 8 1993 remarks on the signing of the North American Free Trade AgreementRemarks on the Signing of NAFTA December 8 1993 source source audio only version Problems playing these files See media help With the end of the Cold War trade became an increasingly prominent issue in international politics as countries sought reduced tariffs and other trade agreements Clinton believed that globalization would promote economic prosperity and democratization throughout the world and he pursued several major trade agreements 123 President Bush had signed the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA with Canada and Mexico in the final year of his term but the agreement had not yet been ratified when Clinton took office Opposition to NAFTA crossed party lines as organized labor allies like Democratic Congressman Dick Gephardt and conservative isolationists like Pat Buchanan both opposed ratification 124 With the fate of NAFTA still uncertain in the House of Representatives Vice President Gore met Ross Perot in a televised debate Gore s strong performance in the debate as well as the Clinton administration s effective lobbying campaign helped NAFTA win ratification in November 1993 125 126 The administration negotiated approximately 300 trade agreements with other countries 127 By granting China temporary most favoured nation status in 1993 128 his administration minimized tariff levels on Chinese imports 129 In 2000 Clinton signed a bill granting permanent normal trade relations to China and American imports from China massively increased in the subsequent years 130 Irish peace talks edit Main article Good Friday Agreement nbsp Clinton shaking hands with Gerry Adams outside a business in East Belfast November 30 1995In 1992 before his presidency Clinton proposed sending a peace envoy to Northern Ireland but this was dropped to avoid tensions with the British government In November 1995 in a ceasefire during the Troubles Clinton became the first president to visit Northern Ireland examining both of the two divided communities of Belfast 131 Despite unionist criticism Clinton used this as a way to negotiate an end to the violent conflict with London Dublin the paramilitaries and the other groups Clinton went on to play a key role in the peace talks which produced the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 132 Military interventions edit See also United Nations peacekeeping Somalia edit Further information Operation Gothic Serpent and Battle of Mogadishu 1993 Unrest in Somalia had escalated into a full scale civil war in 1991 President Bush had dispatched 25 000 soldiers to the country to join a United Nations peacekeeping mission By the late 1993 Somalia remained in a state of civil war and 4 000 American soldiers still served in the UN peacekeeping mission In October 1993 U S special forces launched a raid on Mogadishu with the intention of capturing warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid who had led attacks against U N forces The raid ended in failure and in the deaths of eighteen Americans The humiliating incident led Americans to question the presence of U S soldiers in Somalia After Somali leaders signed a peace agreement in early 1994 Clinton removed U S forces from the country 133 134 Rwanda edit The experience in Somalia exacerbated internal debates around the role of American military power in the Post Cold War era In a victory for those who favored non intervention Clinton placed new limits on the deployment of his troops especially as part of U N peacekeeping missions In April 1994 the Hutu of Rwanda engaged in a genocide against the minority Tutsi killing 800 000 people in a three month span The UN sent a small force to provide aid but the U S with no strategic or economic interest in the country did not intervene Clinton would later describe the non intervention in Rwanda as the worst mistake of his administration 135 136 Haiti edit A military junta in Haiti had ousted the country s democratically elected president Jean Bertrand Aristide in 1991 Clinton was inclined to restore Aristide in part due to stem the flow of Haitians fleeing to the U S However many Americans opposed a military intervention in a nation which posed no threat to the United States Despite congressional and public opposition Clinton announced in September 1994 that he would remove the junta if it did not voluntarily relinquish power 137 At the same time he sent a peace mission consisting of Powell former President Jimmy Carter and Senator Sam Nunn to convince the military government to step aside As U S soldiers prepared to launch a strike against Haiti the military government agreed to restore Aristide and no combat took place 138 Balkans Serbia Bosnia edit See also Breakup of Yugoslavia nbsp Map of the six Yugoslav republics and autonomous provinces in 1991 139 During the closing stages of the Cold War Serbian nationalist Slobodan Milosevic took power as the leader of the Socialist Republic of Serbia His nationalist policies alienated leaders of the other constituent countries of Yugoslavia a multi ethnic state that had been established in 1918 Slovenia Croatia and the Republic of Macedonia each declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1991 but Serbian forces forcefully opposed Croatia s independence beginning the Yugoslav Wars In 1992 Bosnia and Herzegovina also declared independence As in Croatia a significant minority of Serbs opposed to independence lived in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Bosnian War began between proponents and opponents of independence 140 Ethnic cleansing campaigns conducted by Bosnian Serbs provoked world condemnation and the issue of whether to intervene in the Balkan Wars posed one of the greatest foreign policy questions as Clinton took office Activists such Elie Wiesel pressured Clinton to help put an end to the ethnic cleansing and Clinton himself wanted to do something to end the violence 141 General Colin Powell initially convinced Clinton to abstain from a military intervention arguing that the United States should not become involved in a region in which it lacked clear strategic interests 142 In May 1994 after Serb forces invaded safe zones established by the United Nations Protection Force Clinton authorized air strikes against Serb positions 143 The air strikes did not end Serb advances and in July 1995 over 8 000 Bosniaks were killed in the Srebrenica massacre Clinton and National Security Adviser Anthony Lake formulated a plan to end the genocide in Bosnia with the key part of the plan being a major NATO air campaign against the Bosnian Serbs After Clinton won the support of European leaders for the campaign NATO launched Operation Deliberate Force In reaction to bombing campaign and the advance of Bosniak forces Milosevic agreed to begin peace talks 144 Clinton sponsored the talks in Dayton Ohio putting Richard Holbrooke in charge 145 The subsequent Dayton Agreement ended the Bosnian War and divided Bosnia into two autonomous regions 146 Kosovo edit In 1998 the Kosovo War broke out in Kosovo an autonomous province of Serbia A group of ethnic Albanians known as the Kosovo Liberation Army sought independence launching attacks against Serb forces In putting down the attacks Serb forces engaged in an ethnic cleaning campaign against the Albanian population Though NATO leaders were reluctant to become involved and Russia threatened to veto any U N resolution allowing for military action many of Clinton s advisers called for another intervention in the Balkans 147 Hoping to again force Milosevic into peace talks Clinton ordered a bombing campaign against Serb forces in March 1999 As Milosevic refused to capitulate NATO escalated the bombing campaign resulting in the devastation of the Serbian capital of Belgrade As domestic opposition to his leadership grew Milosevic agreed to withdraw troops and allow NATO led peacekeeping force to be stationed in Kosovo Kosovo s status would be disputed in subsequent years while Milosevic was overthrown in October 2000 148 149 NATO and Russia edit See also Enlargement of NATO nbsp Clinton presided over the admission of Hungary Poland and the Czech Republic into NATOOne of Clinton s major priorities was the expansion of NATO into former Eastern Bloc countries in Eastern Europe as Clinton believed that NATO would provide a stabilizing influence on these countries Russian leaders felt threatened as NATO approached its border Clinton cultivated a close relationship with Russian President Boris Yeltsin and in 1997 Clinton won Yeltsin s reluctant assent to the expansion of NATO clearing the way for the accession of Hungary Poland and the Czech Republic 150 Yeltsin pressed for a commitment not to expand NATO into the Baltic states but Clinton was not willing to bind his successors to such a promise The French pushed for the addition of Romania and Slovenia to NATO but Clinton opposed this move as he believed that too quick of an expansion into Eastern Europe would dilute the strength of NATO 151 Clinton tried to help Yeltsin avoid an economic depression reform the Russian economy and prevent a resurgence of Communism Clinton quietly helped Yeltsin win reelection in 1996 and played a major role in Russia s entrance into the Group of Eight G8 a conference of the countries with the largest economies 152 153 Terrorism edit Terrorism emerged as an increasingly important national security issue during Clinton s administration 154 In the closing years of the Soviet Afghan War Osama bin Laden had organized al Qaeda a militant Sunni organization The al Qaeda leaders despised Western values and were particularly incensed by the U S military presence in Saudi Arabia Al Qaeda grew during the 1990s and engaged in terrorism in the Middle East and elsewhere 155 The group claimed responsibility for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing the bombings of two U S embassies in East Africa and the bombing of a U S ship at port in Yemen In retaliation Clinton ordered the bombing of al Qaeda facilities in Afghanistan and Sudan The Central Intelligence Agency and the military tracked bin Laden s movements in an attempt to capture or kill him but Bin Laden evaded capture deep within the mountains of Afghanistan 156 157 North Korea edit nbsp Jo Myong rok center right Kim Jong il s defence minister with U S Secretary of Defense William Cohen 2000In 1994 North Korea blocked international inspectors from verifying the regime s adherence to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty The administration believed that the North Koreans were processing plutonium from a reactor to build two atomic bombs 158 President Clinton recalled that I was determined to prevent North Korea from developing a nuclear arsenal even at the risk of war 158 Declassified Clinton era documents illustrate that the administration had planned for a possible war during the 1994 nuclear crisis 159 The Pentagon had hypothetical plans to strike the North Korea nuclear reactor at Yongbyon but the order was never given 160 Middle East edit Clinton sought to mediate the Arab Israeli conflict encouraging the leaders of Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization to reach the 1993 Oslo Accords 161 A subsequent agreement created the Palestinian National Authority which was given control over the Gaza strip a territory that Israel had taken control of in the 1967 Six Day War During his second terms Clinton sought to revive the dormant peace process specifically by convincing Israel to turn over control of the West Bank another territory captured in the Six Day War Clinton hosted the 2000 Camp David Summit between Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak but the two sides were unable to reach an agreement In September 2000 the Palestinians launched an uprising known as the Second Intifada which would continue after the end of Clinton s presidency 162 Clinton maintained the economic sanctions and the no fly zones imposed on Iraq in the aftermath of the Persian Gulf War In retaliation for Iraq s attempted assassination of former President Bush Clinton ordered cruise missile strikes on the headquarters of the Iraqi Intelligence Service 161 After Hussein repeatedly obstructed the UN commission charged with monitoring Iraq s WMD program the U S and Britain engaged in a bombing campaign against Iraqi weapon facilities 163 These raids would continue intermittently until the 2003 invasion of Iraq 164 Mexico edit In January 1995 Clinton s economic advisers informed him that the Mexican government would default on its loans unless the U S offered a 25 billion loan package Though Clinton and Speaker of the House Gingrich both believed that preventing the Mexican economy from collapsing was important to U S interests Congress refused to authorize an aid package 165 The Clinton administration also helped limit the effects of the 1997 Asian financial crisis by keeping U S markets open 166 Other issues edit Despite opposition from conservatives and veterans of the Vietnam War Clinton normalized relations with Vietnam in 1995 That same year he became the first U S president to visit Vietnam Clinton was also the first president to visit Botswana Slovenia and South Africa 167 In 1997 Tony Blair of the Labour Party won election as the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Clinton and Blair shared a centrist approach to politics and they jointly promoted their Third Way between traditional left wing and right wing policies on the international stage 168 Impeachment and acquittal editFurther information Whitewater controversy Impeachment inquiry against Bill Clinton Impeachment of Bill Clinton and Impeachment trial of Bill Clinton nbsp Remarks including response to Monica Lewinsky scandal January 26 1998 source source source source source source track track Bill Clinton making a presentation that ends with a short commentary on the Monica Lewinsky scandal The presentation is known for the quote I did not have sexual relations with that woman Miss Lewinsky 6 07 Remarks including response to Monica Lewinsky scandal January 26 1998 source source audio only version Problems playing these files See media help Prior to taking office Bill and Hillary Clinton had invested in the Whitewater Development Corporation a real estate development company owned by Jim McDougal and Susan McDougal that quickly went bankrupt The McDougals were later charged with fraud due to their activities connected to a savings and loan association The July 1993 death of Deputy White House Counsel Vince Foster raised new allegations about the Clintons connections to the savings and loan associations marking the start of what became known as the Whitewater controversy To defuse allegations stemming from Foster s death Clinton authorized Attorney General Reno to appoint a special prosecutor under the terms of the Ethics in Government Act Later a special three judge panel convened and appointed Ken Starr a former U S solicitor general as an independent counsel charged with investigating the Whitewater controversy Starr s investigation expanded beyond Whitewater in part because of a sexual harassment lawsuit filed against Clinton by Paula Jones a former Arkansas employee 169 In 1998 Starr s office learned that a White House intern Monica Lewinsky had engaged in an affair with Clinton In a deposition related to the Jones lawsuit Clinton swore under oath that he had not engaged in sexual relations with Lewinsky 170 Clinton was able to squash rumors of the affair until July 1998 when Starr reached an immunity deal with Lewinsky and obtained her confession of the affair Clinton publicly apologized for having an affair with Lewinsky in September 1998 171 Though Clinton argued that he had not lied under oath in his answers to the questions asked at the Jones deposition the House Judiciary Committee began impeachment proceedings against Clinton 170 The controversy over Lewinsky enveloped Congress and the presidency derailing the administration s hopes for reforming Medicare and Social Security 172 Individuals from both parties were outraged by Clinton s affair with an intern but many Democrats were mollified by Clinton s repeated public apologies and viewed the reaction from the media and Republicans as disproportionate to the gravity of the affair 173 The House passed two articles of impeachment against Clinton In January 1999 the Senate began the second presidential impeachment trial in U S history after that of Andrew Johnson Removal of the president would require a two thirds vote of the Senate Clinton was acquitted of the first article by a vote of 45 to convict to 55 to acquit and acquitted of the second by a vote of 50 50 In 1999 Congress chose not to renew the independent counsel law that had allowed Starr s appointment meaning that future investigations of a similar nature would be conducted under the oversight of the Justice Department rather than through a judicial panel Clinton would later publicly acknowledge that he knowingly gave evasive and misleading answers in the Jones deposition 174 Elections during the Clinton presidency editDemocratic seats in Congress Congress Senate House103rd a 57 258104th 47 204105th 45 207106th 45 211107th a 50 b 2121994 mid term elections edit Main article 1994 United States elections A series of controversies including the debate over gays in the military contentious confirmation battles and Travelgate sank Clinton s approval ratings to just 37 percent in mid 1993 175 Further setbacks related to health care and foreign policy left Clinton in a weak position in the lead up to the 1994 elections 176 Led by Newt Gingrich House Republicans created the Contract with America which promised an overhaul of the federal welfare system and passage of a balanced budget amendment term limits and deregulation Republican won control of both chambers of Congress picking up 54 seats in the House of Representatives and 9 Senate seats 177 As the victory gave Republicans unified control of Congress for the first time since 1955 some commentators referred to the 1994 elections as the Republican Revolution 1996 re election campaign edit Main articles Bill Clinton 1996 presidential campaign and 1996 United States presidential election Further information 1996 United States elections 1996 Democratic Party presidential primaries and 1996 Democratic National Convention nbsp President Clinton defeated Republican Bob Dole in the 1996 presidential election Clinton s handling of the budget and the Bosnian War improved his approval ratings and his own polling showed him consistently leading Republican challengers throughout 1996 178 Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole defeated Pat Buchanan and publisher Steve Forbes in the 1996 Republican primaries and Dole was formally nominated at the August 1996 Republican National Convention At the convention Dole selected conservative former Congressman Jack Kemp as his running mate and announced that he favored a 15 across the board income tax cut Perot ran for president again this time as a member of the Reform Party 179 Clinton made a four day whistle stop train tour in route to the Democratic convention in Chicago in August The main theme was centrism In his acceptance speech Clinton called on the American people to help build that bridge to the 21st century for all our children and avoid Bob Dole s bridge to the past He promised more tax cuts and benefits for the hard working citizen who plays by the rules Promising the best is yet to come he reaffirmed his belief in a place called Hope a place called America 180 Clinton continued to position himself as a centrist stating in early 1996 that the era of Big Government is over Meanwhile Dole one of the oldest major party presidential nominees in history proved to be an ineffective campaigner Clinton won by landslides in the popular vote and the Electoral College 179 Dole performed poorly outside the Mountain states and the South 181 Clinton built his landslide on the votes of women African Americans Hispanics younger voters and retired voters Dole conceded defeat gracefully and with good humor after nearly a half century in public office Turnout was low at 49 182 Despite Clinton s victory Republican retained control of the House and the Senate in the 1996 congressional elections 179 With Republicans in control of Congress Clinton refrained from proposing major domestic initiatives in his second term 183 He made a few changes to important positions including Erskine Bowles as his new Chief of Staff Madeleine Albright became Secretary of State William Cohen a Republican became Secretary of Defense Anthony Lake became director of the CIA and Sandy Berger became National Security Advisor 184 1998 mid term elections edit Main article 1998 United States elections Congressional party leaders Senate leaders House leadersCongress Year Majority Minority Speaker Minority103rd 1993 1994 Mitchell Dole Foley Michel104th 1995 1996 Dole Daschle Gingrich Gephardt1996 Lott c Daschle Gingrich Gephardt105th 1997 1998 Lott Daschle Gingrich Gephardt106th 1999 2000 Lott Daschle Hastert Gephardt107th a 2001 Daschle b Lott Hastert GephardtIn the midst of the impeachment hearings Clinton s approval ratings rose above 65 percent Polls showed that many in the public did not condone Clinton s relations with Lewinsky but they did not believe that it was grounds for removal from office Defying predictions of congressional losses the Democrats picked up five seats in the House of Representatives neither party gained seats in the Senate 185 The election represented the first time since 1934 that the party holding the presidency picked up seats in a mid term election 186 Gingrich resigned from office after the elections and he was succeeded as Speaker of the House by Dennis Hastert 185 2000 elections and transition period edit Main article 2000 United States elections Further information 2000 United States presidential election and Presidential transition of George W Bush nbsp Republican George W Bush defeated Democrat Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election nbsp Outgoing President Bill Clinton and President elect George W Bush in the Oval Office on December 19 2000The 2000 elections took place on November 7 Clinton was term limited in 2000 due to the 22nd Amendment Vice President Al Gore dispatched a challenge from Senator Bill Bradley of New Jersey early in the 2000 Democratic primaries 187 Gore chose Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut a prominent intra party critic of Clinton and the affair with Lewinsky as his running mate 188 Texas Governor George W Bush the son of former President Bush won the Republican nomination after defeating Senator John McCain of Arizona in the 2000 Republican primaries For his running mate Bush selected Dick Cheney who had served as Secretary of Defense under George H W Bush Pat Buchanan ran as the Reform Party nominee and he called for a reduction in immigration 187 Ralph Nader ran as the Green Party candidate winning support from many liberals who were disappointed by the centrist tendencies of Clinton and Gore 189 Bush called for major tax cuts a partial privatization of Social Security and school vouchers He also criticized Clinton for nation building in Haiti and other countries and attacked Clinton s sexual indiscretions 190 Clinton and Gore had been close political partners for much of Clinton s presidency but Gore kept his distance from Clinton during the presidential campaign 191 In the election Gore won a narrow plurality of the popular vote taking 48 4 percent to Bush s 47 9 percent and Nader s 2 7 percent Gore won much of the Northeast the Midwest and the Pacific Coast while Bush dominated the South and the Interior West However the winner of the election was unclear on election night as neither candidate had definitively secured a majority of the electoral vote 192 The outcome of the election hinged on Florida which had endured an extremely close presidential election Over the ensuing five weeks both campaigns waged an intense legal battle over election law as Florida conducted a recount The Supreme Court of Florida unanimously upheld the recount but the Bush team appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States On December 12 in a 5 4 decision the Supreme Court ordered an end to the recount leaving Bush as the winner of Florida and the winner of the election 193 Bush became the fourth individual in U S history and the first since 1888 to win the election despite losing the popular vote 194 Republicans also retained control of the House and the Senate giving the party unified control of Congress and the presidency for the first time since the 1954 election 195 Despite the best looking and strong economy in years Clinton s legacy was overshadowed by Gore s election loss in 2000 however Clinton still left office with 66 approval rating Evaluation and legacy editSee also Historical rankings of presidents of the United States nbsp Graph of Clinton s approval ratings in Gallup pollsPolls of historians and political scientists have generally ranked Clinton as an above average president A 2017 C SPAN poll of historians ranked Clinton as the 15th best president 196 A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association s Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Clinton as the 13th best president 197 Clinton s third way of moderate liberalism built up the nation s fiscal health resisted Republican attacks and put the nation on a firm footing abroad amid globalization and the development of anti American terrorist organizations 198 Addressing Clinton s legacy Russell L Riley writes Clinton managed to remake the image and operations of the Democratic Party in ways that effectively undermined the so called Reagan Revolution His New Democrat Party co opted the Reagan appeal to law and order individualism and welfare reform and made the party more attractive to white middle class Americans At the same time the reborn party retained traditional Democratic commitments to providing for the disadvantaged regulating the excesses of the private market place supporting minorities and women and using government to stimulate economic growth Moreover Clinton capitalized on growing dissatisfaction with far right wing extremism within the Republican Party Nevertheless Clinton s claims to a lasting positive legacy for the Democratic Party have been severely undermined by two realities the shift in control of Congress to the Republican Party on his watch and the loss by his would be successor Vice President Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election Thus Clinton s partisan legacy remains complex and uncertain 199 See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp 1990s portalClinton Presidential Center Efforts to impeach Bill Clinton Presidency of Bill Clinton category Environmental policy of the United States during the Clinton administrationNotes edit a b c 17 days of the 103th Congress January 3 1993 January 19 1993 took place under President Bush and 17 days of the 107th Congress January 3 2001 January 19 2001 took place during Clinton s second term a b With Democratic vice president Al Gore provides the tie breaking vote the Democrats also holding a majority in the Senate until January 20 2001 Bob Dole resigned as Senate Majority Leader on June 11 1996 Trent Lott was elected to replace Dole as Senate Majority Leader on June 12 1996 References edit Gil Troy The Age of Clinton America in the 1990s 2015 pp 8 9 Rottinghaus Brandon Vaughn Justin February 16 2015 New ranking of U S presidents puts Lincoln at No 1 Obama at 18 Kennedy judged most overrated The Washington Post Retrieved January 19 2017 Wilentz 2008 p 317 319 Wilentz 2008 p 315 321 Wilentz 2008 p 321 322 R Michael Alvarez and Jonathan Nagler Economics entitlements and social issues Voter choice in the 1996 presidential election American Journal of Political Science 42 4 1998 1349 1363 online Patterson 2005 p 321 John J Pitney President Clinton s 1993 inaugural address Presidential Studies Quarterly 27 1 1997 91 103 online Harris 2005 pp 27 28 Harris 2005 pp 21 22 Harris 2005 pp 4 5 21 Herring 2008 pp 925 926 Harris 2005 pp 24 25 Harris 2005 pp 14 15 Kelly Michael February 12 1993 Household Hiring Is Trickier With New Broom in Capital The New York Times Harris The Survivor p 16 Troy 2015 p 88 Harris 2005 pp 124 125 Harris 2005 pp 148 149 158 Harris 2005 pp 254 255 Herring 2008 p 932 Harris 2005 pp 370 371 Harris 2005 pp 395 396 Harris 2005 pp 58 60 Harris 2005 pp 60 62 Patterson 2005 pp 330 366 Elizabeth Drew On the Edge The Clinton Presidency 1994 pp 114 122 Troy 2015 pp 82 83 a b c Wilentz 2008 p 327 328 Harris 2005 pp 5 6 Harris 2005 pp 23 29 30 Harris 2005 pp 85 86 Harris 2005 p 87 Harris 2005 pp 88 93 Troy 2015 p 90 Harris 2005 pp 157 158 Troy 2015 pp 134 135 a b Wilentz 2008 p 350 351 Wilentz 2008 pp 357 364 Patterson 2005 pp 371 372 Roy E Brownell The Unnecessary Demise of the Line Item Veto Act The Clinton Administration s Costly Failure to Seek Acknowledgment of National Security Rescission American University Law Review 47 1997 1273 online Wilentz 2008 p 371 372 Wilentz 2008 p 407 Troy 2015 p 201 Patterson 2005 p 402 a b Harris 2005 p 112 Wilentz 2008 p 332 333 Patterson 2005 pp 328 329 Harris 2005 pp 113 114 Harris 2005 pp 110 111 Wilentz 2008 p 332 335 Troy 2015 pp 115 116 Heclo Hugh 1995 The Clinton Health Plan Historical Perspective Health Affairs 14 1 86 98 doi 10 1377 hlthaff 14 1 86 PMID 7657231 Harris 2005 p 240 Karen Tumulty Michael Duffy Massimo Calabresi March 13 2008 Assessing Clinton s Experience Children s Health Care Time Archived from the original on March 15 2008 Retrieved March 17 2008 A century of health care reform efforts Boston Globe February 12 2012 Retrieved February 3 2018 Bruce F Nesmith and Paul J Quirk Triangulation Position and Leadership in Clinton s Domestic Policy in Inside the Presidency of Bill Clinton edited by Michael Nelson at al 2016 pp 46 76 R Kent Weaver Ending Welfare As We Know It 2000 a b Wilentz 2008 pp 365 367 Harris 2005 pp 231 232 Patterson 2005 pp 375 376 Michael Nelson et al eds 42 Inside the Presidency of Bill Clinton Miller Center of Public Affairs Books 2016 p 34 Cebul Brent July 2019 Supply Side Liberalism Fiscal Crisis Post Industrial Policy and the Rise of the New Democrats Modern American History 2 02 139 164 doi 10 1017 mah 2019 9 ISSN 2515 0456 A Short History of SNAP U S DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT MAJOR LEGISLATION ON HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT ENACTED SINCE 1932 PRESIDENT WILLIAM J CLINTON Eight Years of Peace Progress and Prosperity a b c Power of Progressive Economics The Clinton Years Center for American Progress Americanprogress org 2011 10 28 Retrieved on 2013 08 16 All figures except for debt percentage are presented in billions of dollars The receipt outlay deficit GDP and debt figures are calculated for the fiscal year which ends on September 30 For example fiscal year 2020 ended on September 30 2020 Represents the national debt held by the public as a percentage of GDP Historical Tables whitehouse gov Office of Management and Budget Table 1 1 Retrieved March 4 2021 Historical Tables whitehouse gov Office of Management and Budget Table 1 2 Retrieved March 4 2021 Historical Tables whitehouse gov Office of Management and Budget Table 7 1 Retrieved March 4 2021 a b Patterson 2005 pp 357 358 Patterson 2005 pp 350 351 Patterson 2005 pp 351 352 Memo to Obama Fans Clinton s presidency was not a failure Slate Retrieved February 13 2005 Harris 2005 pp 84 85 Harris 2005 pp 328 329 Yeaman 2010 pp 689 692 Troy 2015 pp 261 262 Lipton Eric November 14 2008 Gramm and the Enron Loophole New York Times Retrieved February 3 2018 McCabe David February 7 2016 Bill Clinton s telecom law Twenty years later The Hill Retrieved February 3 2018 Harris 2005 pp 16 18 Patterson 2005 pp 327 328 Troy 2015 p 171 Gray Jerry July 13 1996 House Passes Bar to U S Sanction of Gay Marriage The New York Times Why Bill Clinton Signed the Defense of Marriage Act The New Yorker March 8 2013 Wilentz 2008 p 326 327 Patterson 2005 p 331 Allen J Day ed The Annual Register 1996 1997 p 147 Maureen L Rurka The vagueness of partial birth abortion bans deconstruction or destruction Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 89 4 1999 1233 1268 Online 14 Years After Her Daughter s Death Donna Norris is Still Protecting Children Salem News January 5 2010 Retrieved March 17 2023 Amber Hangerman Child Protection Act Law and Legal Definition uslegal com March 17 2023 Retrieved March 17 2023 Troy 2015 p 92 Patterson 2005 pp 341 342 Patterson 2005 pp 330 331 Byron Daynes Bill Clinton Environmental President in Dennis L Soden ed The Environmental Presidency 1999 Martin A Nie It s the Environment Stupid Clinton and the Environment Presidential Studies Quarterly 27 1 1997 39 51 Online Sanjay Ranchod The Clinton National Monuments Protecting Ecosystems with the Antiquities Act Harvard Environmental Law Review 25 2001 535 Richard S Conley Historical Dictionary of the Clinton Era 2012 pp 23 71 72 87 88 112 13 Michael Lenetsky 0 President Clinton and wetlands regulation Boon or bane to the environment Temple Environmental Law and Technology Journal 13 1994 81 Michael Kelso The President as Legislative Leader The Use of Veto Power in Environmental Policy Making Congress amp the Presidency 2019 Clinton William J 2000 Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States William J Clinton 2000 2001 p 721 ISBN 9781623768171 Conley Historical Dictionary of the Clinton Era 2012 pp 88 112 13 John D Leshy The Babbitt Legacy at the Department of the Interior A Preliminary View Environmental Law 31 2001 199 227 at p 227 online Richard Lowitt Oklahoma s Mike Synar Confronts the Western Grazing Question 1987 2000 Nevada Historical Society Quarterly 2004 47 2 pp 77 111 Julie Andersen Hill Public Lands Council v Babbitt Herding Ranchers Off Public Land BYU Law Review 2000 1273 online For his farm policies see Congressional Quarterly Congress and the Nation A Review of Government and Politics 1993 1996 1998 pp 479 508 Congressional Quarterly Congress and the Nation Volume 10 1997 2001 2002 pp 417 428 Bob Woodward The Agenda 2002 pp 127 128 John W Dietrich Interest groups and foreign policy Clinton and the China MFN debates Presidential Studies Quarterly 29 2 1999 280 296 online CQ Congress and the Nation 1989 1992 1993 p 536 Poverty and the Government in America A Historical Encyclopedia Volume 1 By Jyotsna Sreenivasan P 103 Social Security Work Incentives Ticket to Work Pacer org Retrieved on 2013 08 16 Yeaman 2010 pp 683 686 Troy 2015 pp 142 143 Alfred Randy October 27 2008 OCT 28 1998 PRESIDENT SIGNS NEW COPYRIGHT LAW Wired Retrieved February 3 2018 Lee Timothy B October 25 2013 15 years ago Congress kept Mickey Mouse out of the public domain Will they do it again Washington Post Retrieved February 3 2018 Anthony J Eksterowicz and Robert N Roberts The specter of presidential pardons White House Studies 6 4 2006 377 390 H Abbie Erler Executive Clemency or Bureaucratic Discretion Two Models of the Pardons Process Presidential Studies Quarterly 37 3 2007 427 448 Travels of President Bill Clinton U S Department of State Office of the Historian Archived from the original on September 8 2023 Retrieved December 15 2023 Stephen M Walt Two Cheers for Clinton s Foreign Policy Foreign Affairs 79 2 2000 pp 63 79 online Walt p 78 Herring 2008 p 926 Wilentz 2008 p 335 Harris 2005 p 101 Amy Skonieczny Constructing NAFTA Myth representation and the discursive construction of US foreign policy International Studies Quarterly 45 3 2001 433 454 online dead link Clinton on Foreign Policy at University of Nebraska Archived April 28 2015 at the Wayback Machine Executive Order 12850 of May 28 1993 PDF National Archives Herring 2008 p 926 927 Tankersley Jim March 21 2016 What Republicans did 15 years ago to help create Donald Trump today Washington Post Retrieved March 22 2016 1995 Clinton kindles hope in Northern Ireland November 30 1995 Retrieved December 12 2019 Roger MacGinty American influences on the Northern Ireland peace process Journal of Conflict Studies 17 2 1997 31 50 online Patterson 2005 p 338 Cori Elizabeth Dauber The shot seen round the world The impact of the images of Mogadishu on American military operations Rhetoric amp Public Affairs 4 4 2001 653 687 online Herring 2008 pp 927 929 Samantha Power A Problem from Hell America and the Age of Genocide Basic Books 2013 pp 335 390 Harris 2005 pp 136 139 Herring 2008 p 929 Serbia and Kosovo reach EU brokered landmark accord BBC April 19 2013 Retrieved December 13 2014 Wilentz 2008 p 339 340 Harris 2005 pp 42 44 Harris 2005 pp 48 50 Wilentz 2008 pp 355 356 Wilentz 2008 p 360 361 Derek Chollet and Samantha Power eds The Unquiet American Richard Holbrooke in the World 2011 pp 197 237 Herring 2008 p 930 Wilentz 2008 p 403 405 Herring 2008 pp 933 934 Sebastien Barthe and Charles Philippe David Kosovo 1999 Clinton Coercive Diplomacy and the Use of Analogies in Decision Making The Whitehead Journal of Diplomacy and International Relations 8 2007 85 101 online Wilentz 2008 p 373 374 Harris 2005 pp 282 288 Strobe Talbott Clinton and Yeltsin Diplomatic History 2018 42 4 pp 568 71 Strobe Talbott The Russian Hand A Memoir of Presidential Diplomacy 2002 Herring 2008 pp 936 937 Wilentz 2008 p 375 376 Harris 2005 pp 403 40 Chin Kuei Tsui Clinton New Terrorism and the Origins of the War on Terror Routledge 2016 a b Carpenter Ted Galen April 19 2017 The 1994 North Korea Crisis Military Force a Bad Idea Then and a Worse One Now The National Interest Retrieved June 1 2018 Robert A Wampler ed December 8 2017 Engaging North Korea II Evidence from the Clinton Administration National Security Archive Retrieved July 9 2018 CNN Washington was on brink of war with North Korea 5 years ago October 4 1999 edition cnn com Retrieved June 1 2018 a b Wilentz 2008 p 340 Herring 2008 pp 935 936 Wilentz 2008 p 405 406 Patterson 2005 p 381 Wilentz 2008 p 356 357 Herring 2008 pp 765 766 Herring 2008 p 935 Troy 2015 pp 201 202 Gormley pp 572 575 a b Gormley pp 577 581 Troy 2015 pp 224 228 Troy 2015 pp 222 223 Troy 2015 pp 229 230 Gormley pp 579 581 Wilentz 2008 p 331 Wilentz 2008 p 335 336 Wilentz 2008 p 347 350 Harris 2005 p 221 a b c Wilentz 2008 p 368 370 Day ed The Annual Register 1996 1997 p 147 Patterson 2005 pp 373 378 Day ed The Annual Register 1996 1997 pp 148 49 Patterson 2005 p 378 Day ed The Annual Register 1996 1997 p 151 a b Wilentz 2008 p 395 396 Patterson 2005 p 396 a b Patterson 2005 pp 404 405 Harris 2005 pp 389 390 Wilentz 2008 p 414 417 Patterson 2005 pp 406 408 Harris 2005 pp 385 386 Patterson 2005 pp 409 410 Patterson 2005 pp 410 417 Patterson 2005 p 420 Patterson 2005 p 422 Presidential Historians Survey 2017 C SPAN Retrieved May 14 2018 Rottinghaus Brandon Vaughn Justin S February 19 2018 How Does Trump Stack Up Against the Best and Worst Presidents New York Times Retrieved May 14 2018 David Palmer What Might Have Been Bill Clinton and American Political Power Australasian Journal of American Studies 2005 38 58 online summarizes scholarly studies Riley Russell L October 4 2016 BILL CLINTON IMPACT AND LEGACY Miller Center University of Virginia Retrieved May 16 2018 Works cited editGormley Ken 2016 Bill Clinton In Gormley Ken ed The Presidents and the Constitution A Living History New York New York University Press ISBN 9781479839902 Harris John F 2005 The Survivor Bill Clinton in the White House New York Random House ISBN 0 375 50847 3 Herring George C 2008 From Colony to Superpower U S Foreign Relations Since 1776 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507822 0 Leshy John D The Babbitt Legacy at the Department of the Interior A Preliminary View Environmental Law 31 2001 199 227 online Palmer David What Might Have Been Bill Clinton and American Political Power Australasian Journal of American Studies 2005 38 58 online summarizes scholarly studies Patterson James 2005 Restless Giant The United States from Watergate to Bush v Gore Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195122169 Stephanopoulos George 1999 All Too Human A Political Education Boston Little Brown and Company ISBN 0 316 92919 0 Troy Gil 2015 The Age of Clinton America in the 1990s Thomas Dunne Books ISBN 9781250063724 Wilentz Sean 2008 The Age of Reagan HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 074480 9 Woodward Bob 2000 Maestro New York Simon amp Schuster Yeaman Helena 2010 The Bipartisan Roots of the Financial Services Crisis Political Science Quarterly 124 4 681 696 doi 10 1002 j 1538 165X 2009 tb00663 x JSTOR 25655743 Further reading editMain article Bibliography of Bill Clinton Albo Gregory Neoliberalism from Reagan to Clinton Monthly Review 52 11 2001 81 89 in USA online Andelic Patrick Donkey Work Congressional Democrats in Conservative America 1974 1994 2019 excerpt Baker Peter The Breach Inside the Impeachment and Trial of William Jefferson Clinton 2000 ISBN 0 684 86813 X Carr Richard March of the Moderates Bill Clinton Tony Blair and the Rebirth of Progressive Politics Bloomsbury Publishing 2019 Cebul Brent Supply Side Liberalism Fiscal Crisis Post Industrial Policy and the Rise of the New Democrats Modern American History 2 2 2019 139 164 online Conley Richard Steven Historical dictionary of the Clinton era 2012 online Congressional Quarterly Congress and the Nation A Review of Government and Politics 1993 1996 1998 1275pp online Congressional Quarterly Congress and the Nation Volume 10 1997 2001 CQ Press 2002 online Dumbrell John Clinton s Foreign Policy Between the Bushes 1992 2000 Routledge 2009 228pp excerpt Ellison James Bill Clinton George W Bush and Tony Blair The Search for Order in The Palgrave Handbook of Presidents and Prime Ministers From Cleveland and Salisbury to Trump and Johnson Cham Springer International Publishing 2022 pp 319 346 Frankel Jeffrey A and Peter R Orszag eds American Economic Policy in the 1990s 2002 introduction Graff Henry F ed The Presidents A Reference History 3rd ed 2002 Hamilton Nigel 2007 Bill Clinton Mastering the Presidency PublicAffairs ISBN 9781586485160 Halberstam David War in a time of peace Bush Clinton and the generals Simon and Schuster 2001 Harris John F The Survivor Bill Clinton in the White House 2006 online Herrnson Paul S and Dilys Hill The Clinton presidency the first term 1992 96 1999 online Holzer Harold The Presidents Vs the Press The Endless Battle Between the White House and the Media from the Founding Fathers to Fake News Dutton 2020 pp 331 358 online Klein Joe 2002 The Natural The Misunderstood Presidency of Bill Clinton Doubleday ISBN 0 7679 1412 0 Lichtenstein Nelson and Judith Stein A Fabulous Failure The Clinton Presidency and the Transformation of American Capitalism 2023 MacGinty Roger American influences on the Northern Ireland peace process Journal of Conflict Studies 17 2 1997 31 50 online Maney Patrick J 2016 Bill Clinton New Gilded Age President University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700621941 Nelson Michael et al eds 42 Inside the Presidency of Bill Clinton Miller Center of Public Affairs Books 2016 excerpt also online an analysis of interviews with insiders on Bosnia Kosovo Northern Ireland and the Middle East Nelson Michael Clinton s Elections 1992 1996 and the Birth of a New Era of Governance 2020 excerpt Perotti Rosanna ed Foreign Policy in the Clinton Administration 2019 Power Samantha A Problem from Hell America and the Age of Genocide 2002 covers Bosnia Kosovo Srebenica and Rwanda Pulitzer Prize online free to borrow Renshon Stanley ed The Clinton Presidency Campaigning Governing and the Psychology of Leadership 2019 excerpt Walt Stephen M Two Cheers for Clinton s Foreign Policy Foreign Affairs 79 2 2000 pp 63 79 online White Mark J ed 2012 The Presidency of Bill Clinton The Legacy of a New Domestic and Foreign Policy I B Tauris Woodward Bob The Agenda Inside the Clinton White House 1994 on economic policy making in 1993 excerptPrimary sources edit Riley Russell L ed Inside the Clinton White House An Oral History 2016 excerpt Rubinstein Alvin Z et al The Clinton Foreign Policy Reader Presidential Speeches with Commentary M E Sharpe 2000 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Presidency of Bill Clinton Miller Center on the Presidency at U of Virginia brief articles on Clinton and his presidency Clinton White House archives clintonlibrary42 s channel on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Presidency of Bill Clinton amp oldid 1205648535, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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