Monica Lewinsky
Monica Samille Lewinsky is an American activist, television personality, fashion designer, and former White House intern. President Bill Clinton admitted to having had an affair with Lewinsky while she worked at the White House in 1995–1996. The affair and its repercussions became known later as the Clinton–Lewinsky scandal. She later decided to leave the public spotlight to pursue a master’s degree in psychology in London. In 2014, she returned to public view as a social activist speaking out against cyberbullying.
About Monica Lewinsky in brief
Monica Samille Lewinsky is an American activist, television personality, fashion designer, and former White House intern. President Bill Clinton admitted to having had an affair with Lewinsky while she worked at the White House in 1995–1996. The affair and its repercussions became known later as the Clinton–Lewinsky scandal. As a result of the public coverage of the political scandal, Lewinsky gained international celebrity status. She later decided to leave the public spotlight to pursue a master’s degree in psychology in London. In 2014, she returned to public view as a social activist speaking out against cyberbullying. Lewinsky was born in San Francisco, California, and grew up in an affluent family in Southern California in the Westside Brentwood area of Los Angeles and in Beverly Hills. Her father is Bernard Lewinsky, an oncologist, who is the son of German Jews who escaped from Nazi Germany and moved to El Salvador and then to the United States when he was 14. Her mother, born Marcia Kay Vilensky, is an author who uses the name Marcia Lewis. In 1996, she wrote her only book, the gossip biography, The Private Lives of the Three Tenors. In 1992, she allegedly began a five-year affair with Andy Bleiler, her married former high school drama instructor. In 1993, she enrolled at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon, graduating with a bachelor’s degree from the college in 1995. In 1995, she got an unpaid summer White House internship in the office of White House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta. She moved to Washington, D.
C. and took up the position in July 1995. She was transferred to the Pentagon in April 1996 because they felt that she was spending too much time around Clinton. In December 1997, she submitted an affidavit in the Paula Jones case in January 1998 denying any physical relationship with Clinton. She also convinced Lewinsky to save the blue dress that Clinton had given her during their relationship and not to clean it with a dry erase marker. In April 1996, Lewinski’s superiors transferred her from theWhite House to the Defense Department. She left the Pentagon position in December 1997 and later became an assistant to chief Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon. In January 1998, she attempted to persuade Linda Tripp to lie under oath in the Jones case, adding to his on-going investigation into the Whitewater controversy. She told co-worker LindaTripp about her relationship with Bill Clinton, and began secretly recording their telephone conversations beginning in September 1997. In March 1998, Lewinksy told Tripp that she had nine sexual encounters in the Oval Office with President Clinton between November 1995 and March 1997. According to her testimony, these involved fellatio and other sexual acts, but not sexual intercourse. In May 1998, Clinton and others for possible perjury and subornation of perjury in Jones’ case included Lewinsky and others in the land deal deal to use land deal to deal with the Arkansas land deal. In August 1998, the case was settled out of court.
You want to know more about Monica Lewinsky?
This page is based on the article Monica Lewinsky published in Wikipedia (as of Dec. 06, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.