| Bill Clinton was born William
Jefferson Blythe IV on August 19, 1946, in
Hope, Arkansas. His father, an automobile-parts
salesman, died in a car accident three months
before Bill was born. His mother, Virginia
Cassidy, married Roger Clinton, an automobile
dealer, when Bill was seven years old. The
family moved to Hot Springs, Arkansas, where
Bill and his younger half brother, Roger, Jr.,
attended public schools. His mother often engaged
Bill in political discussions and encouraged
his ambitions. Growing up had its difficulties,
however, because his stepfather was an alcoholic
who sometimes beat his mother. Virginia and
Roger eventually divorced but soon remarried,
when Bill was 15. As a gesture Bill had his
last name legally changed to Clinton.
Bill participated in many activities,
including student government, at Hot Springs
High School. In the summer of 1963 he was
chosen to attend the American Legion Boys
State, a government and leadership conference,
in Little Rock, Arkansas. He was elected
a senator and given the opportunity to
go to Washington, D.C. where he shook hands
with President John F.
Kennedy. When Bill returned to Arkansas,
politics became a pursuit from which he
never wavered.
After high school, Clinton went to Georgetown
University. While pursuing a Bachelor of
Arts degree in International Studies he
worked for Democratic Senator William Fulbright
of Arkansas, the chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, who became
an outspoken opponent of the Vietnam War.
Clinton's own opposition to the war grew
as he attended hearings and clipped newspapers.
Like his mentor, Fulbright, Clinton won
a Rhodes scholarship to Oxford University.
During his two years at Oxford Clinton's
opposition to the Vietnam War came into
conflict with his political aspirations.
When he received a draft notice in 1969
he enrolled in the Army Reserve Officers
Training Corps (ROTC) at the University
of Arkansas Law School. He made himself
available for the draft but was never called
up because he received a high number in
the draft lottery held that year.
In the fall of 1970 Clinton entered Yale
Law School. While at Yale Clinton met Hillary
Rodham, a Wellesley College graduate from
suburban Chicago. Together they worked
for George McGovern's presidential campaign
in Texas during the summer and fall of
1972. The following year they graduated
from law school. Clinton worked briefly
in Washington, D.C., as a staff attorney
for the House Judiciary Committee but soon
moved back to Arkansas.
In 1974, Clinton entered his first political
race. He felt that Republican Congressman
John Paul Hammerschmidt, a strong supporter
of President Nixon,
was vulnerable in his re-election bid,
and therefore decided to run against him.
Clinton lost a surprisingly close race,
holding Hammerschmidt to only 52 percent
of the vote.
Clinton married Hillary Rodham in 1975.
A year later he was elected Arkansas's
attorney general. In 1978 Clinton decided
to run for governor of Arkansas. He won
the election against Republican State Chairman
A. Lynn Lowe, receiving 63 percent of the
vote to Lowe's 37 percent.
In an attempt to move Arkansas up from
the bottom of the indexes of social and
economic welfare he made economic growth
and educational improvement top priorities
of his administration. His administration
was also noteworthy in Arkansas history
for appointing women and minorities to
cabinet-level jobs. Nevertheless, during
his two-year term Clinton angered many
voters. In 1980, the same year as daughter
Chelsea was born, his re-election chances
were damaged further by his handling of
the Cuban refugee situation. Thousands
of Cubans who had left or been expelled
from their country were housed in Arkansas,
and Clinton was unable to force the White
House to make other states share the problems
and costs of the operation. That November
he was defeated by Republican Frank White,
a political newcomer and businessman.
After this defeat, Clinton began to work
for a law firm, but many observers believed
that his political career was far from
over. In 1982 he made a successful bid
to return to the governor's mansion; a
residency he did not give up until he entered
the White House in 1993.
On October 3, 1991, Clinton announced
that he was a candidate for the presidency.
His campaign was nearly sunk by charges
of marital infidelity, published in tabloid
newspapers, and of unethical conduct in
legally avoiding the draft during the Vietnam
War. The nickname "Slick Willie",
given to him by an Arkansas journalist,
was used by those critical of him. He survived,
however, and on June 2, 1992, primary victories
in six states gave him the necessary number
of convention delegates. Shortly before
the party convention in July Clinton chose
Tennessee Senator Albert A. Gore, Jr.,
as his running mate.
The Democratic National Convention was
held in New York City in mid-July. As soon
as the convention was over Clinton and
Gore headed west for a series of campaign
bus trips reminiscent of the whistle-stop
train trips of decades before. The strategy
of identifying with middle-class America
and emphasising concern for jobs and health
care paid off. On Tuesday, November 3,
Clinton was elected president, and he took
office on January 20, 1993. At the age
of 46, he was one of the youngest men ever,
and the first Democrat since the 1976 election,
to be elected to the nation's highest office.
Clinton entered office with a wide-ranging
agenda. He immediately appointed his wife
to head a task force to deal with health-care
reform to try to make health care available
for all. By cutting federal spending, creating
millions of new jobs, and reducing the
deficit, he wanted to restore economic
opportunity and security. And in order
to make communities and schools more secure
he enacted the Assault Weapons Ban as part
of the Crime Bill.
In foreign policy, he failed to get a
European consensus for action in the Bosnian
civil war. However, he did help Israel
and Jordan achieve an historic peace treaty
and assisted in the creation of an accord
between Israel and the Palestinians. Furthermore,
he contributed to the cease-fire in Northern
Ireland.
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