How did President Clinton seek a middle ground in American politics?

> CHRONOLOGY

1995
  • Federal building in Oklahoma City bombed.

1996
  • Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program established.

  • President Clinton reelected.

1999
  • Senate trial rejects impeachment of Clinton.

Bill Clinton’s assertion that “the era of big government is over” reflected the Democratic Party’s move to the right that had begun with Jimmy Carter, but Clinton did not completely abandon liberal principles. He extended benefits for the working poor; delivered incremental reforms to feminists, environmentalists, and other groups; and spoke out for affirmative action and gay rights. Yet his administration restricted welfare benefits and attended more to the concerns of middle-class Americans than to the needs of the disadvantaged.

Clinton’s two-term presidency witnessed the longest economic boom in history and ended with a budget surplus. Although various factors generated the prosperity, many Americans identified Clinton with the buoyant economy, elected him to a second term, and supported him even when his reckless sexual behavior led to impeachment, which crippled his leadership in his last years in office.