<< Chapter < Page Chapter >> Page >
A photograph shows an aerial view of proceedings on the Senate floor during Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial.
Floor proceedings in the U.S. Senate during the 1998 impeachment trial of Bill Clinton, who was narrowly acquitted of both charges.

The election of 2000

Despite Clinton’s high approval rating, his vice president and the 2000 Democratic nominee for president, Al Gore, was eager to distance himself from scandal. Unfortunately, he also alienated Clinton loyalists and lost some of the benefit of Clinton’s genuine popularity. Gore’s desire to emphasize his concern for morality led him to select Connecticut senator Joseph I. Lieberman as his running mate. Lieberman had been quick to denounce Clinton’s relationship with Monica Lewinsky. Consumer advocate Ralph Nader ran as the candidate of the Green Party    , a party devoted to environmental issues and grassroots activism, and Democrats feared that he would attract votes that Gore might otherwise win.

On the Republican side, where strategists promised to “restore honor and dignity” to the White House, voters were divided between George W. Bush, governor of Texas and eldest son of former president Bush, and John McCain, an Arizona senator and Vietnam War veteran. Bush had the robust support of both the Christian Right and the Republican leadership. His campaign amassed large donations that it used to defeat McCain, himself an outspoken critic of the influence of money in politics. The nomination secured, Bush selected Dick Cheney, part of the Nixon and Ford administrations and secretary of defense under George H. W. Bush, as his running mate.

One hundred million votes were cast in the 2000 election, and Gore topped Bush in the popular vote by 540,000 ballots, or 0.5 percent. The race was so close that news reports declared each candidate the winner at various times during the evening. It all came down to Florida, where early returns called the election in Bush’s favor by a mere 527 of 5,825,000 votes. Whoever won Florida would get the state’s twenty-five electoral votes and secure the presidency ( [link] ).

A map shows the results of the 2000 presidential election and the number of electoral votes cast for each candidate. The states that voted for Bush include Alaska (3), Nevada (4), Arizona (8), Utah (5), Idaho (4), Montana (3), Wyoming (3), Colorado (8), North Dakota (3), South Dakota (3), Nebraska (5), Kansas (6), Oklahoma (8), Texas (32), Missouri (11), Arkansas (6), Louisiana (9), Indiana (12), Kentucky (8), Tennessee (11), Mississippi (7), Alabama (9), Georgia (13), Florida (25), South Carolina (8), North Carolina (14), Virginia (13), West Virginia (5), Ohio (21), and New Hampshire (4). The states that voted for Gore include California (54), Oregon (7), Washington (11), New Mexico (5), Minnesota (10), Iowa (7), Wisconsin (11), Illinois (22), Michigan (18), Hawaii (4), Pennsylvania (23), Maryland (10), Delaware (3), New Jersey (15), New York (33), Vermont (3), Maine (4), Massachusetts (12), Rhode Island (4), Connecticut (8), and Washington, D.C. (2).
The map shows the results of the 2000 U.S. presidential election. While Bush won in the majority of states, Gore dominated in the more populous ones, winning the popular vote overall.

Because there seemed to be irregularities in four counties traditionally dominated by Democrats, especially in largely African American precincts, Gore called for a recount of the ballots by hand. Florida’s secretary of state, Katherine Harris, set a deadline for the new vote tallies to be submitted, a deadline the counties could not meet. When the Democrats requested an extension, the Florida Supreme Court granted it, but Harris refused to accept the new tallies unless the counties could explain why they had not met the original deadline. When the explanations were submitted, they were rejected. Gore then asked the Florida Supreme Court for an injunction that would prevent Harris from declaring a winner until the recount was finished. On November 26, Harris declared Bush the winner in Florida. Gore protested that not all votes had been recounted by hand. When the Florida Supreme Court ordered the recount to continue, the Republicans appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which decided 5–4 to stop the recount. Bush received Florida’s electoral votes and, with a total of 271 votes in the Electoral College to Gore’s 266, became the forty-third president of the United States.

Section summary

Bill Clinton’s presidency and efforts at remaking the Democratic Party reflect the long-term effects of the Reagan Revolution that preceded him. Reagan benefited from a resurgent conservatism that moved the American political spectrum several degrees to the right. Clinton managed to remake the Democratic Party in ways that effectively institutionalized some of the major tenets of the so-called Reagan Revolution. A “New Democrat,” he moved the party significantly to the moderate center and supported the Republican call for law and order, and welfare reform—all while maintaining traditional Democratic commitments to minorities, women, and the disadvantaged, and using the government to stimulate economic growth. Nevertheless, Clinton’s legacy was undermined by the shift in the control of Congress to the Republican Party and the loss by his vice president Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election.

Questions & Answers

Hello. Please how do I cite this work?
Perezimor Reply
I don't know
Dago
l mean historian work because we are trying To know the past of United states
Dago
I'm using it for an assignment. My question is how do I cite the work? as in what will I write as my reference? I don't know if you understand.
Perezimor
you don't precise what you want
Dago
I'm understood, but I'm not the best to account this for you.
Dago
you can find what you want on YouTube and google because, I' m student like you in search of knowledges
Dago
sir may you account for me bill of right an amandement
Dago
What if Africans were never brought over to the New World as slaves?
Donajane Reply
what is the across the plains In 64 meam
Billy Reply
No idea
zobi
Incidents of early days west of the massoury
zobi
who was Fredrick Douglass
Michael Reply
I want to know about the first 1world war
Rebecca Reply
I don't understand the meaning of human event
Raw Reply
why this bridge name
Raw
because the nucleotides are larger than the RNA produced during meosi
Dawson
What does chasquis mean?
mary Reply
i need help
Maria
chasquis (also chaskis) were the messengers of the Inca empire. Agile, highly trained and physically fit, they were in charge of carrying the quipus, messages and gifts, up to 240 km per day through the chasquis relay system.
NAEEM
How did imperialism Effect America
Melinda Reply
Good question
mary
when did the most distinguished leaders meet
Osvaldo Reply
Maytember 17th, 2056
Dawson
what is the main idea of the passage
The Reply
what major industries emerged in the decades after the Civil war
ComicHickory Reply
Does militia men still exist in U.S.A?
Shakeel Reply
To contrast the steamboat of the antebellum to today’s technology?
Nyrah Reply
contrast the steamboats of the antebellum years with technologies today.
Nyrah
I love reading books about history.
David
I reading what happened earlier so much
melanda
I meant I love to read a lot
melanda
omg I never noticed this until now.
sunny
what advantages did people in urban areas have over rural areas?
HAILEY Reply
what factors helped cause the dust bowl
HAILEY
They had easy availability of food water. They had more comfortable life style as compare to people in rural areas. Better education was at there disposal
Shakeel
why did northerners lose thier resolve to pursue reconstruction
bambi Reply

Get Jobilize Job Search Mobile App in your pocket Now!

Get it on Google Play Download on the App Store Now




Source:  OpenStax, U.s. history. OpenStax CNX. Jan 12, 2015 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11740/1.3
Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google Inc.

Notification Switch

Would you like to follow the 'U.s. history' conversation and receive update notifications?

Ask