The World After The Cold War

Bill Clinton

Bill Clinton was the 42nd U.S. President. He oversaw 1990s economic growth, welfare reform, NAFTA, NATO action in the Balkans, and impeachment over the Monica Lewinsky scandal.

Born
1946 CE
Role
42nd President of the United States

42nd President of the United States (born 1946)

Portrait of Bill Clinton in presidential attire
Facts

Bill Clinton timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

1946–1960s
Arkansas Roots

Bill Clinton was born William Jefferson Blythe III in Hope, Arkansas, in 1946, three months after his father's death.

1979–1992
Governor of Arkansas

Elected governor in 1978, defeated in 1980, and returned to office in 1982, Clinton learned politics through failure as much as victory.

1997–2001
Second Term

Clinton's second term brought budget surpluses, a booming technology economy and diplomatic activism, but it was dominated by the Monica Lewinsky scandal.

Ongoing
Enduring Legacy

Clinton's legacy is unusually divided: economic expansion, fiscal discipline and political reinvention on one side; mass incarceration debates, financial deregulation, failed health reform and impeachment...

Life Journey

Ambition, boom years and a presidency under investigation

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1946–1960s

Arkansas Roots

Bill Clinton was born William Jefferson Blythe III in Hope, Arkansas, in 1946, three months after his father's death. Raised in Hot Springs in a household marked by ambition, music, church life and family strain, he developed early gifts for memory, charm and political connection.

1960s–1970s

Academic Achievement

Clinton studied at Georgetown, Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, and Yale Law School, where he met Hillary Rodham. These years gave him policy confidence, elite networks and a national horizon, while the Vietnam draft controversy foreshadowed the scrutiny that would follow him.

1970s

Return to Arkansas

Instead of staying on the national elite track, Clinton returned to Arkansas, taught law, married Hillary Rodham, and entered electoral politics. A failed congressional run in 1974 still made him visible as a young Democrat with unusual energy.

1979–1992

Governor of Arkansas

Elected governor in 1978, defeated in 1980, and returned to office in 1982, Clinton learned politics through failure as much as victory. He pursued education reform, teacher standards and economic development while adjusting his message for a conservative Southern electorate.

1991–1992

Presidential Run

In 1992 Clinton ran as a 'New Democrat', promising economic renewal, welfare reform, investment in people and a break from old ideological categories. He defeated President George H. W. Bush in a three-way race shaped by recession anxiety and Ross Perot's insurgent campaign.

1993–1997

First Term

Clinton's first term mixed achievement with bruising setback. He passed a deficit-reduction budget, signed NAFTA, backed the Brady Bill and family leave, but failed to enact Hillary Clinton's health-care plan and lost Congress to Republicans in 1994.

1997–2001

Second Term

Clinton's second term brought budget surpluses, a booming technology economy and diplomatic activism, but it was dominated by the Monica Lewinsky scandal. The House impeached him in 1998 for perjury and obstruction of justice; the Senate acquitted him in 1999.

2001–present

Post-Presidency Work

After 2001 Clinton became a global public figure through the Clinton Foundation, disaster relief, diplomacy and party politics. His post-presidency expanded his influence but also renewed debate over money, access and the blurred boundaries around modern political celebrity.

Ongoing

Enduring Legacy

Clinton's legacy is unusually divided: economic expansion, fiscal discipline and political reinvention on one side; mass incarceration debates, financial deregulation, failed health reform and impeachment on the other. He remains essential to understanding late twentieth-century America.

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American Presidents lineage
Lineage47 presidents
American Presidents
1789 CE–present

The succession of American presidents from George Washington to today.

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Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

Sources & Further Reading

Reliable reference works, archives and reading paths connected to this profile.

Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Bill Clinton,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Bill Clinton,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Bill Clinton,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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