“There is nothing wrong with America that cannot be cured by what is right with America.”
Bill Clinton delivered this line at his first presidential inauguration on 20 January 1993. He was 46 years old. He had just become the 42nd President of the United States. The country he inherited was uncertain about its direction.
The had ended two years earlier. The economy was sluggish. Public trust in government was eroding. Americans were asking what their country stood for now that the defining conflict of the century was over.
Clinton’s answer was not a policy proposal. It was a frame. It told Americans to stop measuring their problems against their failures and start measuring them against their strengths. That is the entire weight of this sentence.
What It Means
The sentence is constructed as a logical proof. If you accept the first half, the second half follows automatically. There is nothing wrong with America. That cannot be cured. By what is right with America. Each clause tightens the argument. Nothing is excluded. No problem is too large. No failure is beyond repair.
The word cured is deliberate. It is medical language. It implies that the nation is a living organism, not a broken machine. Machines need replacement parts from outside. Organisms heal from within. Clinton is saying America already contains everything it needs to recover.
The phrase what is right with America does the heaviest work. It does not specify what that is. It does not need to. Every listener fills that phrase with their own version of American strength: its institutions, its people, its ideals, its history of reinvention. The sentence invites participation rather than prescribing an answer.
It is also a deliberate choice to say cured rather than fixed or solved. Solutions come from outside the problem. Cures come from within the patient. That is not an accident of phrasing. It is the entire argument compressed into one word.
Where It Comes From
arrived in Washington as a new kind of Democrat. He was young, Southern and deliberate about projecting optimism. His predecessor, George H.W.
Bush struggled to articulate a domestic vision after the Gulf War. The public mood was restless. A third-party candidate, Ross Perot, had won nearly 19% of the popular vote, a historic signal of voter frustration.
Clinton understood that the moment required renewal, not grievance. He wrote this sentence to establish a tone before a single policy was announced. It said: I believe in this country. And I expect you to as well.
Another Perspective
Clinton also said: “The price of doing the same old thing is far higher than the price of change.” That companion thought reveals the engine beneath the inauguration line.
Faith in America’s strengths is not passive. It demands action. You do not cure a patient by admiring their potential. You cure them by putting that potential to work.
How to Apply It
The personal translation of this quote is direct and powerful. Replace America with whatever you are trying to fix: Your business, your family, your habits, your health. Ask not what is broken. Ask what is already working.
Ask how the working parts can be applied to the broken ones. That shift in frame changes everything about how you approach a problem.
Stop outsourcing your solutions. Start mining your existing strengths. The cure is rarely imported. It is almost always already present.
Build a habit of strength auditing before problem-solving. List what is genuinely working before listing what is not. You will often find the two lists are more connected than they appear.
Related Reading
My Life by Bill Clinton
Clinton’s autobiography traces the experiences and convictions that underlie this quote’s optimism. It is a long book written by a man who never stopped believing in second chances.
The Audacity of Hope by
Obama builds an entire political philosophy on the same foundation. The argument is structurally identical: America’s ideals are the solution to America’s failures.
Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin
It’s a study of Lincoln’s presidency and his insistence on harnessing opposing strengths rather than excluding them. The same logic Clinton used applied a century earlier.
Profiles in Courage by John F. Kennedy
It is a collection of moments when American leaders used what was right about the country to face what was wrong. Eight stories, one recurring argument.
