When Bill Clinton was the President of the United States, did Hillary Clinton casually turn a blind eye to her husband’s affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky?
Were the stitches President Clinton received in his last term in office, a result of Hillary throwing a heavy object at him in a fit of rage?
And most importantly, did Hillary Clinton ever really forgive him for his transgressions?
With the recent release of the tell-all book, The Residence: Inside the Private world of the White House, written by former Bloomberg News White House reporter, Kate Andersen Brower, the answers to everything us political gossipers wondered during the 1990s are revealed.
Related: Why are a quarter of us having affairs when no one wants to?
The book, told as first hand accounts by ex-White House staffers, chronicles the lives of several First Families and spans 10 different White House administrations. Unsurprisingly, it’s the turbulent 8-year reign of Bill Clinton that is gathering the most attention, especially with his wife Hillary rumoured to be considering her own tilt at the White House.
A recent book excerpt featured on Politico.com, highlights some telling scenes from the Clinton residence during his reported affair with intern Monica Lewinsky:
“White House Florist Ronn Payne remembers one day in 1998, after President Clinton had publicly admitted to his affair with a former White House intern, when he was coming up the service elevator with a cart to pick up old floral arrangements and saw two butlers gathered outside the West Sitting Hall listening in as the Clintons argued viciously with each other.
The butlers motioned him over and put their fingers to their lips, telling him to be quiet. All of a sudden he heard the first lady bellow “goddamn bastard!” at the president—and then he heard someone throw a heavy object across the room. The rumor among the staff was that she threw a lamp.
The butlers, Payne said, were told to clean up the mess. In an interview with Barbara Walters, Mrs. Clinton made light of the story, which had made its way into the gossip columns. “I have a pretty good arm,” she said. “If I’d thrown a lamp at somebody, I think you would have known about it.”
Mr Payne however, wasn't surprised by the tensions, telling Andersen Brower that “You heard so much foul language” in the Clinton White House.
In her role as a White House Reporter for Bloomberg News, Andersen Brower travelled the world on Air Force One and Two with American Presidents and their families to gather stories. She admits it was difficult at first to get current and former White House staffers, senior advisers, former First Ladies and their children to speak candidly, they eventually opened up. Especially when it came to dishing out details about Bill and Hilary Clinton and the subsequent fallout from his affair with the 22-year-old White House intern, Monica Lewsinsky in 1995