Friday, May 31, 2019

President Bill Clinton and The Lewinsky Scandal Essay -- William Jeffe

Clinton and The Lewinsky ScandalOn January 17th, 1998, President Clinton videotaped a deposition for the Paula Jones lawsuit against him. December 19th, el hitherto months later, Bill Clinton became still the second president in our nations history to face impeachment from congress. The 1998-1999 was a tumultuous year for the President, the media, and the American people as a whole. Yet, the virtually intriguing and surprising aspect of the scandal was not that Bill Clinton would ever cheat on his wife or that his administration would survive such a terrible scandal. Nor was it a revelation that the media would be zealously intrigued by a sex scandal involving the President. The one aspect of the Lewinksy Scandal that was truly interesting was the reception of the public. Despite the knowledge that Clinton had an affair with an intern and probably lied about it, Clintons job approval rating did not decrease or even stay the same his ratings rose to levels approaching 70% Ev ery time a new damning piece of evidence came to light, media pundits everywhere believed that Clintons ratings would fall. Yet, they were wrong. The republican Party believed that the scandal would finally bring down Clinton and his popular support. They also were wrong and paid a considerable political price. How did this happen? To help agnize and explain this phenomenon, I will examine three political actors -- the President, the media, and the public and their relationship with each other. I will discuss President Clintons last(prenominal) and his history of scandals. The way that each actor has dealt with Clintons scandal-ridden past has had an important effect on how each responded to and was affected by the Lewinsky Scandal. Each actors res... ...Wilcox, Public Opinion The Paradoxes of Clintons Popularity, ed. make J. Rozell and Clyde Wilcox, The Clinton Scandal and the Future of American Government (Washington, D.C. Georgetown University Press, 2000)p. 117. ib. Ibid. Molly W. Andolina and Clyde Wilcox, Public Opinion The Paradoxes of Clintons Popularity, ed. Mark J. Rozell and Clyde Wilcox, The Clinton Scandal and the Future of American Government (Washington, D.C. Georgetown University Press, 2000) p.117. Michael J. Gerhardt, The Impeachment and Acquittal of William Jefferson Clinton, ed. Mark J. Rozell and Clyde Wilcox, The Clinton Scandal and the Future of American Government (Washington, D.C. Georgetown University Press, 2000). Robert Busby, Defending the American President Clinton and Lewinsky Scandal (New York Palgrave, 2001) p.47. Ibid. p.213. Ibid.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

the punk experience essays

the punk experience papers In 1994, chief Oliver Stone and storywriter Quentin Tarantino made the encapsulation of the American artful cu...