William Jefferson Clinton was born on August 19, 1946, in Hope,
Arkansas. As a delegate to Boys Nation while in high school, he met
President John Kennedy in the White House Rose Garden. The encounter led
him to enter a life of public service. President Clinton graduated from
Georgetown University and in 1968 won a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford
University. He received a law degree from Yale University in 1973 and
shortly thereafter entered politics in Arkansas.
He was defeated in his campaign for Congress in Arkansas’s Third
District in 1974. The next year he married Hillary Rodham, a graduate of
Wellesley College and Yale Law School. In 1980, Chelsea, their only
child, was born. Clinton was elected Arkansas attorney general in 1976
and won the governorship in 1978. After losing a bid for a second term,
he regained the office in 1982, and served until his 1992 bid for the
presidency of the United States.
Elected president of the United States in 1992, and again in 1996,
President Clinton was the first Democratic president to be awarded a
second term in six decades. Under his leadership, the United States
enjoyed the strongest economy in a generation and the longest economic
expansion in U.S. history. President Clinton’s core values of building
community, creating opportunity, and demanding responsibility resulted
in unprecedented progress for America, including moving the nation from
record deficits to record surpluses; the creation of over 22 million
jobs—more than any other administration; low levels of unemployment,
poverty and crime; and the highest homeownership and college enrollment
rates in history.
President Clinton’s accomplishments in the White House include
increasing investment in education, providing tax relief for working
families, helping millions of Americans move from welfare to work,
expanding access to technology, encouraging investment in underserved
communities, protecting the environment, countering the threat of
terrorism, and promoting peace and strengthening democracy around the
world. His administration’s economic policies fostered the largest
peacetime economic expansion in history. President Clinton rpeviously
served as chairman of the National Governors’ Association. As former
chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council, he is one of the original
architects and leading advocates of the Third Way movement.
Since 2001, President Clinton has dedicated himself to philanthropy
and continued public service through the William J. Clinton Foundation,
which is focused on finding practical and measurable solutions to
address pressing challenges at home and abroad. In addition to his
Foundation work, President Clinton joined with former President Bush to
help with relief and recovery following the tsunami in the Indian Ocean
and to lead a nationwide fundraising effort in the wake of Hurricane
Katrina. He also served as U.N. Special Envoy for Tsunami Recovery from
2005 to 2007.