1992 Clinton VS. Bush VS. Perot

"Health Care"

Transcript

Museum of the Moving Image
The Living Room Candidate
"Health Care," Bush, 1992

FEMALE NARRATOR: Bill Clinton's health plan puts the government in control and that will ration health care.

[TEXT: Ration Health Care]

FEMALE NARRATOR: And limit a doctor's ability to save your life. His plan would require $218 billion in...

[TEXT: Medicare & Medicaid Cuts]

FEMALE NARRATOR: ...Medicare and Medicaid cuts in the next five years. His plan could cost 700,000 Americans their jobs. Government run plans have been tried in Europe, only there...

FEMALE NARRATOR [and TEXT]: It's known as socialized medicine.

[TEXT: The Clinton Health Plan.]

FEMALE NARRATOR: You can't trust Bill Clinton's health plan. It's wrong for you. It's wrong for America.

[TEXT: Wrong For You. Wrong For America.]

Credits

"Health Care," Bush-Quayle '92 General Committee, Inc., 1992

Maker: The November Company

Video courtesy of the George Bush Presidential Library.

From Museum of the Moving Image, The Living Room Candidate: Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2012.
www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1992/health-care (accessed June 10, 2025).

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1992 Clinton Bush Perot Results

George Bush, the incumbent president, enjoyed approval ratings near 90 percent following America’s decisive military victory in Operation Desert Storm in 1991. Many leading Democrats, including New York Governor Mario Cuomo, declined to run, and the party’s nomination went to Bill Clinton, governor of Arkansas. By early 1992, the U.S. economy was faltering, and Clinton’s campaign decided to focus almost exclusively on this issue. A prominently placed sign in Clinton’s campaign headquarters read "It’s the economy, stupid!" Ironically, because of the fall of the Soviet Union in 1989, which the Republicans took credit for, the Cold War was not an important issue during the campaign, and the Democrats were able to keep the emphasis on domestic concerns. The importance of the economy as an issue was amplified by the surprisingly successful third-party candidacy of billionaire Ross Perot, whose campaign concentrated on deficit reduction.

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