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Section Chronology
In March 1991, Bush’s chances for reelection in 1992 looked golden. The Gulf War victory catapulted his approval rating to 88 percent, causing the most prominent Democrats to opt out of the presidential race. But that did not deter William Jefferson “Bill” Clinton, who at age forty-five had served as governor of Arkansas for twelve years. Like Carter in 1976, Clinton and his running mate, Tennessee senator Albert Gore Jr., presented themselves as “New Democrats” and sought to rid the party of its liberal image.
CHAPTER LOCATOR
How did the United States respond to the end of the Cold War and tensions in the Middle East?
How did President Clinton seek a middle ground in American politics?
How did President Clinton respond to the challenges of globalization?
How did President George W. Bush change American politics and foreign policy?
What obstacles stood in the way of President Obama’s reform agenda?
Conclusion: How have Americans debated the role of the government?
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Clinton promised to work for the “forgotten middle class,” who “do the work, pay the taxes, raise the kids, and play by the rules.” He promised a tax cut for the middle class, pledged to reinvigorate government and the economy, and vowed “to put an end to welfare as we know it.” Bush was vulnerable to an unemployment rate of 7 percent and to a challenge from self-made Texas billionaire H. Ross Perot, whose third-party organization revealed Americans’ frustrations with government and the major parties. Clinton won 43 percent of the popular vote, Bush 38 percent, and Perot 19 percent — the strongest third-party finish in eighty years. By casting nearly two-thirds of their votes against Bush, voters suggested a mandate for change but not the direction that change should take.
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