In his newly released memoir Citizen, former President Bill Clinton claims to have apologized to all the women he “wronged” throughout his tumultuous political career. But two women who accused him of sexual assault are calling him out, labeling his remarks as revisionist and insincere.

“I’ve Never Heard From Him”

Paula Jones, the former Arkansas state employee who famously sued Clinton for sexual harassment in 1994, dismissed his apology as a hollow attempt to salvage his public image. Jones, now 58, alleges that in 1991, then-Governor Clinton exposed himself and demanded oral sex in a Little Rock hotel room.

Speaking exclusively to The Enquirer, Jones scoffed, “I’ve never heard from him. If he wants to apologize, he should do it personally — either in public or over the phone. Words in a book don’t mean much without action.”

Jones eventually settled her lawsuit for $850,000, but Clinton never admitted guilt. At the time, his attorney, Robert S. Bennett, claimed the settlement was merely a way to avoid prolonged legal battles.

Broaddrick: “He’s Just Trying to Rewrite History”

Juanita Broaddrick, another accuser, remains equally unconvinced. Broaddrick, now 81, claims Clinton raped her in a Little Rock hotel room in 1978 while she was volunteering for his gubernatorial campaign.

In Citizen, Clinton asserts that he publicly apologized multiple times, even referencing a 2018 interview with Today’s Craig Melvin, where he said, “I did say publicly on more than one occasion I was sorry.”

Broaddrick isn’t buying it. “Until Clinton apologizes to all the women he abused, raped, and assaulted, he has no right to write another book,” she fumed.

Broaddrick recounted an unsettling encounter with Clinton years after the alleged assault. In her 2017 memoir You’d Better Put Some Ice on That, she described how he approached her unannounced at a nursing home she operated in Arkansas, attempting to shake her hand and apologize.

“I stopped in my tracks. He reached out, and I backed away. He said, ‘I’m a changed man. I would never do anything like that again.’ I looked him in the eye and said, ‘You can go to hell,’ and walked off,” she recalled.

Two weeks later, she discovered Clinton was launching his presidential campaign. “He wasn’t apologizing out of remorse,” she said. “He was trying to bury bad publicity before it exploded.”

A Legacy of Scandal

Clinton’s political career has been dogged by allegations of infidelity and misconduct. His affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, then 22, led to his 1998 impeachment — though he was acquitted by the Senate.

Kathleen Willey, a former White House volunteer, also accused Clinton of groping her in the Oval Office in 1993.

Meanwhile, political operative Roger Stone has long claimed that Clinton engaged in sexual encounters with over 2,000 women, including prostitutes. These allegations, though often dismissed as politically motivated, continue to haunt the former president.

Apology or Damage Control?

As Clinton seeks to reshape his legacy with Citizen, his accusers remain adamant that his public apologies are nothing more than damage control.

“Clinton has always been a master of spin,” Jones remarked. “But no book can erase the past.”

Broaddrick agreed, emphasizing, “True remorse isn’t written in a memoir. It’s spoken directly to the people you hurt — and he’s never done that.”

With his wife, Hillary Clinton, facing her own legacy challenges after two failed presidential bids, the Clintons continue to navigate a storm of scandal and public scrutiny.

Whether Citizen will rehabilitate Bill Clinton’s image or reignite old controversies remains to be seen. But for Jones and Broaddrick, one thing is clear: forgiveness is not something they’ve ever been offered — or likely to give.


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