Bill Clinton Memoir



Clinton

Bill clinton

Monica Lewinsky was a White House intern for US President Bill Clinton Pic: AP. An excerpt from Linda Tripp’s newly released memoir; ‘A Basket of Deplorables – What I Saw Inside the Clinton White House’ was published in the New York Post which describes a party held in August 1996 for Clinton where Lewinsky said she ‘squeezed Bill’s private parts’ in a packed Radio City.

BILL Clinton should be a “registered sex offender,” the Monica Lewinsky whistleblower alleged in her explosive memoir. In her book Basket of Deplorables due for release on December 8, Linda Tripp savaged the Clintons and accused Bill of being “a serial sexual predator.”. Also on the 2001 return, Hillary Clinton reported receiving $2.9 million, the first installment of an $8 million advance for her memoir, Living History. The contract was signed the day before she. Bill Clinton's 'My Life' sold over 1.2 million copies, Sarah Palin's 'Going Rogue' sold nearly 1.4 million, Hillary Clinton's first memoir 'Living History' sold 1.15 million and George W. Bush's 'Decision Points' reached nearly 2 million copies. 'Hard Choices' has some stark differences to those books, though. Knopf, a division of Penguin Random House, paid $15 million for the rights to Bill Clinton’s 2004 memoir “My Life” when he left the White House, while George W. Bush made an estimated $10.

Overview

My Life Bill Clinton Pdf

Twenty years after the Starr Report and the Clinton impeachment, former special prosecutor Ken Starr finally shares his definitive account of one of the most divisive periods in American history.
You could fill a library with books about the scandals of the Clinton administration, which eventually led to President Clinton's impeachment by the House of Representatives. Bill and Hillary Clinton have told their version of events, as have various journalists and participants. Whenever liberals recall those years, they usually depict independent counsel Ken Starr as an out-of-control, politically driven prosecutor.
But as a New York Times columnist asked in 2017, 'What if Ken Starr was right?' What if the popular media in the 1990s completely misunderstood Starr's motives, his tactics, and his ultimate goal: to ensure that no one, especially not the president of the United States, is above the law?
Starr — the man at the eye of the hurricane — has kept his unique perspective to himself for two full decades. In this long-awaited memoir, he finally sheds light on everything he couldn't tell us during the Clinton years, even in his carefully detailed 'Starr Report' of September 1998.
Contempt puts you, the reader, into the shoes of Starr and his team as they tackle the many scandals of that era, from Whitewater to Vince Foster's death to Travelgate to Monica Lewinsky. Starr explains in vivid detail how all those scandals shared a common thread: the Clintons' contempt for our system of justice.
This book proves that Bill and Hillary Clinton weren't victims of a so-called 'vast right-wing conspiracy.' They played fast and loose with the law and abused their powers and privileges.
Today, from the #MeToo aftermath and Russiagate to President Trump’s impeachment trial, the office of the American presidency is in crisis—and Starr’s insights are more relevant now than ever.