Clinton’s magnetism, his ability to capture the middle ground, and the nation’s economic resurgence enabled him to survive scandals and impeachment. Early in his presidency, charges related to firings of White House staff, political use of FBI records, and the Clintons’ real estate investments in Arkansas led to an official investigation by an independent prosecutor.
In January 1998, the independent prosecutor, Kenneth Starr, began to investigate a charge that Clinton had had sexual relations with a twenty-
Most Americans condemned the president’s behavior but approved of the job he was doing and opposed his removal from office. One man said, “Let him get a divorce. . . . Don’t take him out of office and disrupt the country.” Some saw Starr as a fanatic invading individuals’ privacy. Those favoring removal insisted that the president must set a high moral standard and that lying to a grand jury, even over a private matter, was a serious offense. The Senate votes fell far short of the two-