When the affair between 25-year-old Monica Lewinsky and then-President Bill Clinton went public in 1998, the White House intern was lambasted a slut, a whore, and a tramp. Now, 16 years later, she could be the next big role model.
Young women today may not have lived through The Lewinsky Scandal as adults, but rallying behind wronged women who have found their voice is a millennial mantra — and Lewinsky, after being ostracized for over a decade, is capitalizing on that.
With a three-word tweet and a moving speech, Lewinsky this week is back in the spotlight, positioning herself as an advocate for eliminating cyber-bullying and calling on young people to own their identities.
On Monday, at Forbes magazine’s “Under 30 Conference,” Lewinsky, now 41, stood by her actions and by her name — which she said she’s been often advised to change. She told more than 1,000 young entrepreneurs that she wants to “put my suffering to good use and a purpose to my past.”
“What we really need is a cultural revolution. Online, we’ve got a compassion deficit – an Empathy Crisis — and something tells me that matters a lot more to most of us,” Lewinsky told the group, adding that she hopes her story will make a difference to other victims of cyber-bullying.
So far, she’s having a mostly positive influence, especially on women now the same age she was when she began her relationship with Clinton.
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“As I have gotten older and more intertwined with social media, I have viewed Lewinsky through a completely different perspective,” 21-year-old Virginia Tech student Katherine Coulter told msnbc. “At the time of the scandal, her story was not perceived as someone who was victimized by the president or media.”
Lewinsky’s name will be forever linked to the scandal, which led to the second ever impeachment of a sitting president — but she’s found a way (or a solid start) to turn her experience into a good thing.
“I commend her for her enthusiasm to take on the often difficult political landscape for women — especially considering her past,” 22-year-old Syracuse University student Alexandra Curtis told msnbc. “While Lewinsky hasn’t been a credible figure in political history, I do commend her for moving past extreme public humiliation and scandal to enter a field she is passionate about.”
One college student even found hints of feminism in Lewinsky’s speech — a word the infamous former White House intern previously said she doesn’t embrace.
“Not letting one mistake define you and trying to reclaim your narrative — that is a very feminist-y position to take and something women can really rally behind,” Georgetown University student Alyssa Peterson told msnbc.
“Obviously she made a mistake,” added Peterson, who like Lewinsky is also a former White House intern. It would probably be hard, Peterson said, for almost anyone to fend off a president’s advances.
Related: Monica Lewinsky rewrites her own story
Lewinsky’s physical relationship with Clinton ultimately led to his impeachment by the Republican-controlled House in 1998. He was acquitted by the Senate in 1999.









