1996 Clinton VS. Dole

"Tell"

Transcript

Museum of the Moving Image
The Living Room Candidate
"Tell," Clinton, 1996

MALE NARRATOR: Dole's risky economic scheme.

[TEXT: Risky]

MALE NARRATOR: He still won't tell us how he'll pay for it all.

[TEXT". . .deficit to balloon. . ."-Business Week 8/12/96]

MALE NARRATOR: Business Week says it could balloon deficits. Deficits, higher interest rates, slower growth. We've seen that before.

[TEXT: 1991]

MALE NARRATOR: Dole's campaign co-chair, Senator D'Amato, says he'd look at raising Medicare premiums to help pay for Dole's promises.

[TEXT: Raise Medicare Premiums]

MALE NARRATOR: Imagine what Newt Gingrich will go after. President Clinton. One hundred billion dollar targeted tax cut while balancing the budget. Ten million new jobs. A better future.

Credits

"Tell," Clinton/Gore '96 General Committee, 1996

Maker: The November 5 Group

From Museum of the Moving Image, The Living Room Candidate: Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2012.
www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1996/tell (accessed June 18, 2025).

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1996 Clinton Dole Results

Thanks to a robust economy and the absence of divisive foreign-policy issues in the presidential election, Bill Clinton enjoyed a relatively trouble-free ride on his way to becoming the first Democrat since Franklin Roosevelt to be elected to a second full term. Clinton’s victory represented an impressive political comeback. In 1994, Republicans had won control of both houses. Wielding enormous influence, House Speaker Newt Gingrich had forged the Republicans' "Contract with America," a conservative legislative agenda. During intense budget battles between the president and Congress, the federal government was shut down twice. Clinton blamed this on the Republicans, which enabled him to position himself in the center and portray the Republicans as extremists. The Clinton campaign repeatedly linked his opponent Bob Dole to Gingrich, while championing mainstream causes such as the Family Leave Act, college tuition credits, and a ratings system for television. Dole tried, without much success, to use the "character issue" to his advantage. Yet the public showed little interest in Clinton scandals such as "Whitewater," "Filegate," and "Travelgate," and allegations of campaign-finance abuse.

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