Life after the presidency of Bill Clinton
- Byname of:
- William Jefferson Clinton
- Original name:
- William Jefferson Blythe III
- Also Known As:
- William J. Clinton
- William Jefferson Blythe III
- William Jefferson Clinton
- Political Affiliation:
- Democratic Party
- Awards And Honors:
- Presidential Medal of Freedom (2013)
- Notable Works:
- “My Life”
- “The President Is Missing”
- “The President’s Daughter”
- Notable Family Members:
- spouse Hillary Clinton
- daughter Chelsea Clinton
- On the Web:
- Pew Research Center - Clinton-Lewinsky Story (Oct. 24, 2024)
News •
As Clinton’s presidency was ending, his wife’s political career was beginning. In 2000 Hillary Rodham Clinton was elected to the U.S. Senate representing New York; she was the first wife of a U.S. president to win elected office. She went on to lose narrowly to Barack Obama the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination in 2008, but Obama appointed her secretary of state in his presidential administration. Bill Clinton remained active in political affairs and was a popular speaker on the lecture circuit. In 2001 he founded the William J. Clinton Foundation, a philanthropic organization that addressed various global issues through such programs as the Clinton HIV/AIDS Initiative (established 2002), the Clinton Economic Opportunity Initiative (2002), the Clinton Global Initiative (2005), and the Clinton Climate Initiative (2006). In 2004 the William J. Clinton Presidential Library and Museum opened in Little Rock.
The following year, after a tsunami in the Indian Ocean had caused widespread death and devastation, Bill Clinton was appointed by United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan to serve as a special envoy for relief efforts, a position he held until 2007. In 2009 Clinton succeeded former president George H.W. Bush as chairman of the National Constitution Center, a history museum in Philadelphia. Later that year he was named a UN special envoy to Haiti. In the wake of the devastating earthquake that struck that country in January 2010, Clinton’s UN portfolio was expanded to include overseeing aid efforts and reconstruction. During the 2012 general election in the United States, Clinton campaigned for Obama, helping him to win a second term in the White House. In 2013 Clinton was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
In 2015 Hillary Clinton announced that she was entering the U.S. presidential race of 2016, and Bill played an active role in her campaign. She won the Democratic nomination, becoming the first woman to top the presidential ticket of a major party in the United States, but ultimately lost the election to Donald Trump. In 2017 Bill and the four other living former presidents (Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama) launched the One America Appeal, which initially sought to help the victims of Hurricane Harvey and later expanded its mission to include those affected by several subsequent hurricanes.
Bill Clinton’s writings include an autobiography, My Life (2004); Giving: How Each of Us Can Change the World (2007), in which he encouraged readers to become involved in various worthy causes; and Back to Work: Why We Need Smart Government for a Strong Economy (2011). He also wrote (with James Patterson) the thrillers The President Is Missing (2018) and The President’s Daughter (2021).
Cabinet of Pres. Bill Clinton
The table provides a list of cabinet members in the administration of Pres. Bill Clinton.
January 20, 1993–January 20, 1997 (Term 1) | |
---|---|
State | Warren M. Christopher |
Treasury | Lloyd Bentsen, Jr. |
Robert E. Rubin (from January 10, 1995) | |
Attorney General | Janet Reno |
Interior | Bruce Babbitt |
Agriculture | Mike Espy |
Dan Glickman (from March 30, 1995) | |
Commerce | Ronald H. Brown |
Mickey Kantor (from April 12, 1996) | |
Labor | Robert B. Reich |
Defense | Les Aspin |
William J. Perry (from February 3, 1994) | |
Health and Human Services | Donna E. Shalala |
Housing and Urban Development | Henry G. Cisneros |
Transportation | Federico Peña |
Energy | Hazel R. O'Leary |
Education | Richard W. Riley |
Veterans Affairs | Jesse Brown |
January 20, 1997–January 20, 2001 (Term 2) | |
State | Madeleine Albright |
Treasury | Robert E. Rubin |
Lawrence H. Summers (from July 2, 1999) | |
Attorney General | Janet Reno |
Interior | Bruce Babbitt |
Agriculture | Dan Glickman |
Commerce | William M. Daley |
Norman Mineta (from July 21, 2000) | |
Labor | Alexis M. Herman |
Defense | William Cohen |
Health and Human Services | Donna E. Shalala |
Housing and Urban Development | Andrew M. Cuomo |
Transportation | Rodney Slater |
Energy | Federico Peña |
Bill Richardson (from August 18, 1998) | |
Education | Richard W. Riley |
Veterans Affairs | Togo D. West, Jr. |
Hershel W. Gober (from July 25, 2000) |