fbpx
Wikipedia

Presidential transition of Bill Clinton

The presidential transition of Bill Clinton began when he won the United States 1992 United States presidential election, becoming the president-elect, and ended when Clinton was inaugurated at noon EST on January 20, 1993.

Presidential transition of Bill Clinton
President-elect Bill Clinton speaks with outgoing president George H. W. Bush at the White House on November 18, 1992
FormationNovember 3, 1992
DissolvedJanuary 20, 1993
TypeQuasi-governmental–private
PurposePresidential transition
HeadquartersLittle Rock, Arkansas and Washington, D.C.
Leaders
Warren Christopher (Director)
Vernon Jordan (Chairman)

Pre-election developments

Clinton's presidential campaign launched an effort to plan for a prospective presidential transition in August 1992.[1] The effort was known as the "Clinton-Gore Pre-Transition Planning Foundation" or the "Clinton–Gore Presidential Transition Planning Foundation".[2][3] Clinton chose to have the effort be headed by his campaign chair Mickey Kantor.[4][5] Businessman Gerald Stern was named as the coordinator of the planning group on September 24, 1992, heading its day-to-day operations.[3][6] Assisting him was lawyer John Hart.[6] Other members of the team included Warren Christopher, Henry Cisneros, Vernon Jordan, and Madeleine Kunin.[2][5] The team was headquartered in Little Rock, Arkansas, in an office suite in a building only blocks away from the campaign's headquarters.[2][5][6] Barry Carter oversaw the national security aspects of the transition planning.[6] The team collected vast amounts of research on past presidential transitions, and compiled a large briefing books outlining a strategy for a potential transition.[2][6][1] By late-October, the transition effort had a full-time staff of between ten and fifteen people.[6] By late-October, the team had also received roughly 2,000 inquiries from job seekers in their prospective presidential administration.[5] Despite the early start, few decisions about hires for Clinton's administration were outlined until after the election.[4]

Planning for the logistics of the potential transition was overseen by John P. Hart.[5] The transition team had already, in the weeks before the election, begun preparing office space in downtown Washington, D.C. to house part of the prospective post-election transition's staff if Clinton or another candidate were to unseat him in the election.[5]

On October 6, 1992, President George H. W. Bush signed an appropriation that would provide $5 million to a prospective transition. If Clinton or another candidate were to win, the appropriation would give the president-elect's transition team $3.5 million, and give $1.5 million to Bush's administration to aid them in the transition. This was in accordance with a 1988 increase in funding for presidential transitions to these amounts.[7]

Official transition

 
Letter which outgoing president George H. W. Bush left in the Oval Office for incoming president Bill Clinton at the end of the transition

After Clinton defeated Bush in the election, both Bush and Clinton publicly proclaimed their desire for a smooth transition between their administrations.[8]

In addition to transitioning into the presidency, Clinton had to transition out of the Arkansas governorship. The last time that a sitting governor had transitioned into the presidency had been Franklin D. Roosevelt after the 1932 United States presidential election.[9] Clinton resigned from his governorship on December 12, 1992.[10]

Following the election, after tensions between Kantor and Clinton's top campaign staff had arisen, Kantor was dismissed as head of the transition effort.[4] On November 6, Warren Christopher was named as the transition director and Vernon Jordan was named to serve as the chairman of the transition's board, making them co-leaders of the transition.[4][2][11][12] Bush named Andrew Card to head the Bush administration's role in the transition.[2][13]

On November 13, Clinton named several dozen other members of his transition team. The members he named were noted by The New York Times to have, "diversity in age, sex and ethnic background".[12] Robert Reich was named to lead the economic policy team, and Sandy Berger was named to lead the foreign policy team.[12] Clinton's transition team largely consisted of individuals that had worked on his presidential campaign.[14]

On November 13, Clinton outlined ethics guidelines for his transition staff. These guidelines would forbid any staff or volunteers from, in the first six months of the Clinton administration, lobbying the government in areas they had worked on during the transition. The ethics guidelines also required transition workers to file detailed financial disclosure forms, and forbid them from doing any work on the transition that appeared to be a conflict of interest.[12][15] These ethics guidelines received praise from the groups Common Cause and Public Citizen.[15]

In mid-November, the Little Rock operations of the transition moved their offices to a new building.[16]

On November 18, President Bush hosted President-elect Clinton at the White House.[17] The following day, First Lady Barbara Bush hosted a tour of the residence for incoming First Lady Hillary Clinton.[18]

In the early weeks of the transition, the president-elect's communications director, George Stephanopoulos, said that the president-elect was receiving roughly 30,000 items of mail per day.[15]

In addition to the $3.5 million the government provided the Clinton transition team, $5.3 million was raised through private contributions to fund their effort.[19]

The transition was considered chaotic, in some respects.[4][20] In late January 1993, shortly after the transition ended, historian Carl Brauer described his assessment of performance of Clinton's transition as, "mixed".[21] The transition was headquartered both in Little Rock, Arkansas and Washington, D.C., with this geographic split of the operation creating some problems.[4] The main decisions tended to be made from the Little Rock headquarters, where Clinton largely remained during the transition.[4][2] The transition's policy advisors were ideologically split between centrists and liberals.[4] Clinton's transition took longer than his predecessor to designate appointees to top positions.[4][22] The transition began publicly announcing the first his designees to be appointed to major executive branch offices six weeks after winning the election. It finished announcing them in the eleventh week following his election victory.[22] It also took Clinton particularly long to name a White House Chief of Staff, with him waiting until mid-December before naming Mack McLarty.[20]

Clinton spent great amounts of time during the transition devising plans with an intimate group of confidantes, including his wife Hillary, vice-president-elect Al Gore, and transition director Warren Christopher.[4] Much of these discussions were had in the study of the Arkansas Governor's Mansion.[16] Clinton deeply involved himself with the details of his new presidential administration, especially the selection of members of his Cabinet.[4] Clinton's wife was also heavily involved in making staffing decisions for his Cabinet.[4] Both Clinton and his wife had interest in making his cabinet have increased racial diversity and more women members than past cabinets.[4] Clinton himself had declared the goal of choosing a Cabinet that, "looks like America".[23] The Clintons' decision to be so deeply involved in personnel decisions contributed to the delay in naming individuals to the positions.[4]

In contrast to his deep involvement with Cabinet staffing decisions, Clinton paid comparatively little attention to many staffing decisions for his White House staff.[4][20] Clinton would later write in his autobiography My Life that he had, "spent so much time on the cabinet," that he, "hardly spent any time on the White House staff".[24] Clinton also avoided appointing White House insiders to his administrations, making few hires of individuals that had served in the administration of the last Democratic president, Jimmy Carter.[4] Clinton appeared to demonstrate possible hostility towards hiring Washington insiders.[4] Consequentially, many of his White House hires were of individuals that had worked on his campaign, but who were largely young and lacked government experience.[4] The transition also failed to heed the advice of the outgoing Bush administration to name members of his White House staff early into his transition.[4] While Clinton refrained from hiring many veterans of past administrations, his transition team did meet for advice with members of past Democratic administrations, particularly those of John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Jimmy Carter.[11]

Clinton had roughly 4,000 executive branch positions to make appointments to, in addition to setting a budget and political agenda.[1]

Officially heading personnel selection was Richard Riley. However, after Riley was named to be Clinton's choice for Secretary of Education, he found his attention divided between his role in the transition and preparing for his pending position in the presidential administration.[4][25]

Clinton throughout his transition, made clear that he understood that, until January 20, the country had a singular president, George H. W. Bush.[26] As the inauguration came close, Bush's advisers had begun working with Clinton's advisors, particularly on foreign policy, to ensure that there would be a smooth transfer of power. For instance, for weeks before the inauguration, Brent Scowcroft, Bush's National Security Advisor, would meet daily with Anthony Lake, who Clinton had designated to be his National Security Advisor.[26]

In December, Clinton was a participant in a televised economic summit in Little Rock. While this provided an opportunity for the president-elect to display his policy knowledge, the summit also took up valuable time during a crucial stage of his transition.[4][27]

Controversies

Controversy arose when president-elect Clinton indicated support for allowing homosexual individuals to openly serve in the United States Armed Forces, a stance that was contrary both to the position of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Clinton's own Democratic Party.[4]

A scandal arose about Clinton's choice for Attorney General, Zoe Baird, having failed to pay taxes for domestic servants that had been in the country illegally. The scandal became known as "Nannygate".[28] Baird's resignation would ultimately end up being withdrawn the day after Clinton's inauguration.[4]

Iraq crisis

Beginning roughly two weeks before Bush was to hand power over to Clinton, perhaps seeking to take advantage of the possible hesitancy of Bush to respond right before the end of the transition, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein began engaging in brinksmanship. In response, on January 13, 1993, Bush ordered a limited airstrike on Iraq. In the days before the airstrike, Clinton received detailed briefings on the situation. Bush's national security advisors spoke with the men Clinton had designated to be his when he took office. President Bush called Clinton an hour before the airstrike to inform him of the decision. While the airstrike was ultimately Bush's decision, a top Bush administration official claimed that Clinton and his own national security advisors had been "partners in the deliberations" over the airstrike. Clinton said that the airstrike was, "the right decision, done in the right way."[26][29][30][31]

Analysis of transition

The transition has been considered chaotic, in some respects.[4][20] In 2001, Stephen Hess of the Brookings Institution called the transition, "downright chaotic".[23] In 2008, Dan Brillman of Newsweek characterized the transition as "clumsy" as well as "unfocused and undisciplined".[24] Clinton's press secretary Dee Dee Myers would later call the transition period "hell".[24]

Further reading

References

  1. ^ a b c Marshall, Matt (10 Nov 1992). "Musical Chairs in the Seat of Power". Newspapers.com. Los Angeles Times.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Smith, Stephanie (11 February 2008). "CRS Report for Congress Presidential Transitions" (PDF). Congressional Research Service. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Clinton fills in healthcare blanks". Newspapers.com. The Indianapolis News. 25 Sep 1992. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Skinner, Richard (7 October 2016). "Bill Clinton set a bad example with his transition". Vox. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Bennett, Susan (27 Oct 1992). "Clinton team secretly planning transition". Newspapers.com. The News and Observer (Raleigh, North Carolina) m. Knight-Ridder News Serice. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Gellman, Barton; Balz, Dan (29 October 1992). "CLINTON TRANSITION TEAM READY TO HIT THE GROUND RUNNING". Washington Post. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  7. ^ "JUST ASK Where does the money come from to pay Bill Clinton's transition team expenses?". Newspapers.com. Democrat and Chronicle. 13 Nov 1992. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  8. ^ Mann, Jim (8 November 1992). "Encounter can be icy as presidents pass torch". Newspapers.com. The Charlotte Observer. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  9. ^ "Eyes on the prize: Duke plans transition period". Newspapers.com. North Adams Transcript. Associated Press. 19 Sep 1988. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  10. ^ "Bill Clinton resignation letter". arstudies.contentdm.oclc.org. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  11. ^ a b "Clinton team confers with party veterans". Newspapers.com. Santa Cruz Sentinel. The Associated Press. 21 Nov 1992. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  12. ^ a b c d Friedman, Thomas L. (13 November 1992). "THE TRANSITION: The New Team 1; Clinton Selects Diverse Team of Advisers (Published 1992)". The New York Times. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  13. ^ "Clinton Transition Gets Going". Newspapers.com. The Charlotte Observer. 8 November 1992. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  14. ^ "Stuck Out There In Transition Limbo". Newspapers.com. The Leaf-Chronicle. 14 Dec 1992. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  15. ^ a b c King, John (14 Nov 1992). "Clinton details stringent ethics rules for aides". Newspapers.com. Intelligencer Journal. The Associated Press. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  16. ^ a b Friedman, Thomas L. (16 Nov 1992). "Transition team moves operations to new site". Newspapers.com. Fort Worth Star-Telegram. The New York Times. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  17. ^ "Photos: Presidents in Post-Election Transition". WSJ. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  18. ^ Radcliffe, Donnie (November 20, 1992). "BARBARA BUSH'S TOUR OF DUTY". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 25, 2022.
  19. ^ Zausner, Robert (30 November 2000). "A new Bush fund appeal". Newspapers.com. The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  20. ^ a b c d Vyse, Graham (16 November 2016). "Bill Clinton's Transition Was Worse Than Trump's (For Now)". The New Republic. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  21. ^ Reidy, Chris (31 Jan 1993). "Bush More Lion Than Lame Duck in Last Days". Newspapers.com. Albuquerque Journal. Boston Gobe. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  22. ^ a b Schrader, Esther; Shogren, Elizabeth (14 Dec 2000). "Bush team must scurry to name top appointees". Newspapers.com. South Florida Sun Sentinel. Los Angeles Times.
  23. ^ a b Hess, Stephen (1 March 2001). "First Impressions: A Look Back at Five Presidential Transitions". www.brookings.edu. Brookings Institution. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  24. ^ a b c Brillman, Dan (2008-11-04). "Politics: A History of Bumpy Transitions". Newsweek. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  25. ^ Burke, John P. (2004). Becoming President : The Bush Transition, 2000-2003. Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner Publishers. p. 19. ISBN 1-58826-292-8.
  26. ^ a b c Rankin, Robert A.; Bennett, Susan (14 Jan 1993). "Bush, Clinton stand as one". Newspapers.com. Tallahassee Democrat. Knight-Ridder Washington Bureau.
  27. ^ Weisman, Jonathan (13 Nov 2000). "Job of staffing new government can be awesome". Newspapers.com. The Record. The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  28. ^ "Trump's pick for budget chief has a Nannygate problem". chicagotribune.com. Chicago Tribune. 30 January 2017. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  29. ^ Gellman, Barton; Devroy, Ann (14 January 1993). "U.S. DELIVERS LIMITED AIR STRIKE ON IRAQ". Washington Post. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  30. ^ Apple, R. W. Jr. (14 January 1993). "RAID ON IRAQ; U.S. AND ALLIED PLANES HIT IRAQ, BOMBING MISSILE SITES IN SOUTH IN REPLY TO HUSSEIN'S DEFIANCE (Published 1993)". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  31. ^ McNulty, Timothy J. (14 January 1993). "ALLIED STRIKE PUNISHES IRAQ". chicagotribune.com. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2 February 2021.

presidential, transition, bill, clinton, presidential, transition, bill, clinton, began, when, united, states, 1992, united, states, presidential, election, becoming, president, elect, ended, when, clinton, inaugurated, noon, january, 1993, president, elect, b. The presidential transition of Bill Clinton began when he won the United States 1992 United States presidential election becoming the president elect and ended when Clinton was inaugurated at noon EST on January 20 1993 Presidential transition of Bill ClintonPresident elect Bill Clinton speaks with outgoing president George H W Bush at the White House on November 18 1992FormationNovember 3 1992DissolvedJanuary 20 1993TypeQuasi governmental privatePurposePresidential transitionHeadquartersLittle Rock Arkansas and Washington D C LeadersWarren Christopher Director Vernon Jordan Chairman Contents 1 Pre election developments 2 Official transition 2 1 Controversies 2 2 Iraq crisis 3 Analysis of transition 4 Further reading 5 ReferencesPre election developments EditClinton s presidential campaign launched an effort to plan for a prospective presidential transition in August 1992 1 The effort was known as the Clinton Gore Pre Transition Planning Foundation or the Clinton Gore Presidential Transition Planning Foundation 2 3 Clinton chose to have the effort be headed by his campaign chair Mickey Kantor 4 5 Businessman Gerald Stern was named as the coordinator of the planning group on September 24 1992 heading its day to day operations 3 6 Assisting him was lawyer John Hart 6 Other members of the team included Warren Christopher Henry Cisneros Vernon Jordan and Madeleine Kunin 2 5 The team was headquartered in Little Rock Arkansas in an office suite in a building only blocks away from the campaign s headquarters 2 5 6 Barry Carter oversaw the national security aspects of the transition planning 6 The team collected vast amounts of research on past presidential transitions and compiled a large briefing books outlining a strategy for a potential transition 2 6 1 By late October the transition effort had a full time staff of between ten and fifteen people 6 By late October the team had also received roughly 2 000 inquiries from job seekers in their prospective presidential administration 5 Despite the early start few decisions about hires for Clinton s administration were outlined until after the election 4 Planning for the logistics of the potential transition was overseen by John P Hart 5 The transition team had already in the weeks before the election begun preparing office space in downtown Washington D C to house part of the prospective post election transition s staff if Clinton or another candidate were to unseat him in the election 5 On October 6 1992 President George H W Bush signed an appropriation that would provide 5 million to a prospective transition If Clinton or another candidate were to win the appropriation would give the president elect s transition team 3 5 million and give 1 5 million to Bush s administration to aid them in the transition This was in accordance with a 1988 increase in funding for presidential transitions to these amounts 7 Official transition Edit Letter which outgoing president George H W Bush left in the Oval Office for incoming president Bill Clinton at the end of the transition After Clinton defeated Bush in the election both Bush and Clinton publicly proclaimed their desire for a smooth transition between their administrations 8 In addition to transitioning into the presidency Clinton had to transition out of the Arkansas governorship The last time that a sitting governor had transitioned into the presidency had been Franklin D Roosevelt after the 1932 United States presidential election 9 Clinton resigned from his governorship on December 12 1992 10 Following the election after tensions between Kantor and Clinton s top campaign staff had arisen Kantor was dismissed as head of the transition effort 4 On November 6 Warren Christopher was named as the transition director and Vernon Jordan was named to serve as the chairman of the transition s board making them co leaders of the transition 4 2 11 12 Bush named Andrew Card to head the Bush administration s role in the transition 2 13 On November 13 Clinton named several dozen other members of his transition team The members he named were noted by The New York Times to have diversity in age sex and ethnic background 12 Robert Reich was named to lead the economic policy team and Sandy Berger was named to lead the foreign policy team 12 Clinton s transition team largely consisted of individuals that had worked on his presidential campaign 14 On November 13 Clinton outlined ethics guidelines for his transition staff These guidelines would forbid any staff or volunteers from in the first six months of the Clinton administration lobbying the government in areas they had worked on during the transition The ethics guidelines also required transition workers to file detailed financial disclosure forms and forbid them from doing any work on the transition that appeared to be a conflict of interest 12 15 These ethics guidelines received praise from the groups Common Cause and Public Citizen 15 In mid November the Little Rock operations of the transition moved their offices to a new building 16 On November 18 President Bush hosted President elect Clinton at the White House 17 The following day First Lady Barbara Bush hosted a tour of the residence for incoming First Lady Hillary Clinton 18 In the early weeks of the transition the president elect s communications director George Stephanopoulos said that the president elect was receiving roughly 30 000 items of mail per day 15 In addition to the 3 5 million the government provided the Clinton transition team 5 3 million was raised through private contributions to fund their effort 19 The transition was considered chaotic in some respects 4 20 In late January 1993 shortly after the transition ended historian Carl Brauer described his assessment of performance of Clinton s transition as mixed 21 The transition was headquartered both in Little Rock Arkansas and Washington D C with this geographic split of the operation creating some problems 4 The main decisions tended to be made from the Little Rock headquarters where Clinton largely remained during the transition 4 2 The transition s policy advisors were ideologically split between centrists and liberals 4 Clinton s transition took longer than his predecessor to designate appointees to top positions 4 22 The transition began publicly announcing the first his designees to be appointed to major executive branch offices six weeks after winning the election It finished announcing them in the eleventh week following his election victory 22 It also took Clinton particularly long to name a White House Chief of Staff with him waiting until mid December before naming Mack McLarty 20 Clinton spent great amounts of time during the transition devising plans with an intimate group of confidantes including his wife Hillary vice president elect Al Gore and transition director Warren Christopher 4 Much of these discussions were had in the study of the Arkansas Governor s Mansion 16 Clinton deeply involved himself with the details of his new presidential administration especially the selection of members of his Cabinet 4 Clinton s wife was also heavily involved in making staffing decisions for his Cabinet 4 Both Clinton and his wife had interest in making his cabinet have increased racial diversity and more women members than past cabinets 4 Clinton himself had declared the goal of choosing a Cabinet that looks like America 23 The Clintons decision to be so deeply involved in personnel decisions contributed to the delay in naming individuals to the positions 4 In contrast to his deep involvement with Cabinet staffing decisions Clinton paid comparatively little attention to many staffing decisions for his White House staff 4 20 Clinton would later write in his autobiography My Life that he had spent so much time on the cabinet that he hardly spent any time on the White House staff 24 Clinton also avoided appointing White House insiders to his administrations making few hires of individuals that had served in the administration of the last Democratic president Jimmy Carter 4 Clinton appeared to demonstrate possible hostility towards hiring Washington insiders 4 Consequentially many of his White House hires were of individuals that had worked on his campaign but who were largely young and lacked government experience 4 The transition also failed to heed the advice of the outgoing Bush administration to name members of his White House staff early into his transition 4 While Clinton refrained from hiring many veterans of past administrations his transition team did meet for advice with members of past Democratic administrations particularly those of John F Kennedy Lyndon B Johnson and Jimmy Carter 11 Clinton had roughly 4 000 executive branch positions to make appointments to in addition to setting a budget and political agenda 1 Officially heading personnel selection was Richard Riley However after Riley was named to be Clinton s choice for Secretary of Education he found his attention divided between his role in the transition and preparing for his pending position in the presidential administration 4 25 Clinton throughout his transition made clear that he understood that until January 20 the country had a singular president George H W Bush 26 As the inauguration came close Bush s advisers had begun working with Clinton s advisors particularly on foreign policy to ensure that there would be a smooth transfer of power For instance for weeks before the inauguration Brent Scowcroft Bush s National Security Advisor would meet daily with Anthony Lake who Clinton had designated to be his National Security Advisor 26 In December Clinton was a participant in a televised economic summit in Little Rock While this provided an opportunity for the president elect to display his policy knowledge the summit also took up valuable time during a crucial stage of his transition 4 27 Controversies Edit Controversy arose when president elect Clinton indicated support for allowing homosexual individuals to openly serve in the United States Armed Forces a stance that was contrary both to the position of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Clinton s own Democratic Party 4 A scandal arose about Clinton s choice for Attorney General Zoe Baird having failed to pay taxes for domestic servants that had been in the country illegally The scandal became known as Nannygate 28 Baird s resignation would ultimately end up being withdrawn the day after Clinton s inauguration 4 Iraq crisis Edit Beginning roughly two weeks before Bush was to hand power over to Clinton perhaps seeking to take advantage of the possible hesitancy of Bush to respond right before the end of the transition Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein began engaging in brinksmanship In response on January 13 1993 Bush ordered a limited airstrike on Iraq In the days before the airstrike Clinton received detailed briefings on the situation Bush s national security advisors spoke with the men Clinton had designated to be his when he took office President Bush called Clinton an hour before the airstrike to inform him of the decision While the airstrike was ultimately Bush s decision a top Bush administration official claimed that Clinton and his own national security advisors had been partners in the deliberations over the airstrike Clinton said that the airstrike was the right decision done in the right way 26 29 30 31 Analysis of transition EditThe transition has been considered chaotic in some respects 4 20 In 2001 Stephen Hess of the Brookings Institution called the transition downright chaotic 23 In 2008 Dan Brillman of Newsweek characterized the transition as clumsy as well as unfocused and undisciplined 24 Clinton s press secretary Dee Dee Myers would later call the transition period hell 24 Further reading EditClinton Administration Transition Interviews National Archives and Records Administration Transition Team Collection Finding Aid Bill Clinton Presidential Library amp MuseumReferences Edit a b c Marshall Matt 10 Nov 1992 Musical Chairs in the Seat of Power Newspapers com Los Angeles Times a b c d e f g Smith Stephanie 11 February 2008 CRS Report for Congress Presidential Transitions PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved 29 January 2021 a b Clinton fills in healthcare blanks Newspapers com The Indianapolis News 25 Sep 1992 Retrieved 2 February 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Skinner Richard 7 October 2016 Bill Clinton set a bad example with his transition Vox Retrieved 1 February 2021 a b c d e f Bennett Susan 27 Oct 1992 Clinton team secretly planning transition Newspapers com The News and Observer Raleigh North Carolina m Knight Ridder News Serice Retrieved 18 May 2021 a b c d e f Gellman Barton Balz Dan 29 October 1992 CLINTON TRANSITION TEAM READY TO HIT THE GROUND RUNNING Washington Post Retrieved 3 February 2021 JUST ASK Where does the money come from to pay Bill Clinton s transition team expenses Newspapers com Democrat and Chronicle 13 Nov 1992 Retrieved 2 February 2021 Mann Jim 8 November 1992 Encounter can be icy as presidents pass torch Newspapers com The Charlotte Observer Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2 February 2021 Eyes on the prize Duke plans transition period Newspapers com North Adams Transcript Associated Press 19 Sep 1988 Retrieved 18 May 2021 Bill Clinton resignation letter arstudies contentdm oclc org Retrieved 23 November 2022 a b Clinton team confers with party veterans Newspapers com Santa Cruz Sentinel The Associated Press 21 Nov 1992 Retrieved 2 February 2021 a b c d Friedman Thomas L 13 November 1992 THE TRANSITION The New Team 1 Clinton Selects Diverse Team of Advisers Published 1992 The New York Times Retrieved 3 February 2021 Clinton Transition Gets Going Newspapers com The Charlotte Observer 8 November 1992 Retrieved 2 February 2021 Stuck Out There In Transition Limbo Newspapers com The Leaf Chronicle 14 Dec 1992 Retrieved 2 February 2021 a b c King John 14 Nov 1992 Clinton details stringent ethics rules for aides Newspapers com Intelligencer Journal The Associated Press Retrieved 2 February 2021 a b Friedman Thomas L 16 Nov 1992 Transition team moves operations to new site Newspapers com Fort Worth Star Telegram The New York Times Retrieved 18 May 2021 Photos Presidents in Post Election Transition WSJ Retrieved 6 February 2021 Radcliffe Donnie November 20 1992 BARBARA BUSH S TOUR OF DUTY The Washington Post Retrieved December 25 2022 Zausner Robert 30 November 2000 A new Bush fund appeal Newspapers com The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved 31 January 2021 a b c d Vyse Graham 16 November 2016 Bill Clinton s Transition Was Worse Than Trump s For Now The New Republic Retrieved 3 February 2021 Reidy Chris 31 Jan 1993 Bush More Lion Than Lame Duck in Last Days Newspapers com Albuquerque Journal Boston Gobe Retrieved 2 February 2021 a b Schrader Esther Shogren Elizabeth 14 Dec 2000 Bush team must scurry to name top appointees Newspapers com South Florida Sun Sentinel Los Angeles Times a b Hess Stephen 1 March 2001 First Impressions A Look Back at Five Presidential Transitions www brookings edu Brookings Institution Retrieved 21 May 2021 a b c Brillman Dan 2008 11 04 Politics A History of Bumpy Transitions Newsweek Retrieved 6 June 2021 Burke John P 2004 Becoming President The Bush Transition 2000 2003 Boulder Colo Lynne Rienner Publishers p 19 ISBN 1 58826 292 8 a b c Rankin Robert A Bennett Susan 14 Jan 1993 Bush Clinton stand as one Newspapers com Tallahassee Democrat Knight Ridder Washington Bureau Weisman Jonathan 13 Nov 2000 Job of staffing new government can be awesome Newspapers com The Record The Baltimore Sun Retrieved 4 February 2021 Trump s pick for budget chief has a Nannygate problem chicagotribune com Chicago Tribune 30 January 2017 Retrieved 2 February 2021 Gellman Barton Devroy Ann 14 January 1993 U S DELIVERS LIMITED AIR STRIKE ON IRAQ Washington Post Retrieved 2 February 2021 Apple R W Jr 14 January 1993 RAID ON IRAQ U S AND ALLIED PLANES HIT IRAQ BOMBING MISSILE SITES IN SOUTH IN REPLY TO HUSSEIN S DEFIANCE Published 1993 The New York Times Retrieved 2 February 2021 McNulty Timothy J 14 January 1993 ALLIED STRIKE PUNISHES IRAQ chicagotribune com Chicago Tribune Retrieved 2 February 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Presidential transition of Bill Clinton amp oldid 1130570272, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.