The Drudge Report was the first domino. Within days, mainstream outlets like The Washington Post and ABC News were scrambling to catch up. The internet had officially become a primary source for breaking political news, bypassing traditional editorial gatekeepers. The case was handed to Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr, a conservative Republican who had been investigating the Clintons for years (most notably over a failed Arkansas real estate deal called Whitewater). Starr’s team aggressively pursued Lewinsky, eventually granting her immunity in exchange for her testimony and, crucially, a piece of physical evidence: a navy blue dress stained with Clinton's semen.

But the most graphic details came on September 11, 1998, when the House of Representatives voted to release the online. For the first time in history, millions of Americans could read explicit descriptions of sexual encounters between a president and an intern. The report was a cultural firestorm—discussed in offices, living rooms, and late-night comedy shows. Impeachment and Aftermath On December 19, 1998, the House of Representatives voted to impeach President Clinton on two charges: perjury (lying to the grand jury) and obstruction of justice (attempting to cover up the affair). He became only the second U.S. president (after Andrew Johnson) to be impeached.

By April 1996, Lewinsky’s superiors, concerned about the amount of time she was spending near the president, transferred her to the Pentagon. While there, she confided in a colleague and new friend, Linda Tripp, about her secret relationship with the president. Unbeknownst to Lewinsky, Tripp began secretly recording their phone conversations, hoping to gather evidence of what she considered an abuse of power and potential perjury. The fuse for the explosion was a separate sexual harassment lawsuit filed against President Clinton by a former Arkansas state employee named Paula Jones. Jones’s lawyers were eager to establish a pattern of behavior by Clinton. They began subpoenaing women who had allegedly had affairs with him, including Monica Lewinsky.

In a sworn deposition for the Jones case on January 17, 1998, President Clinton was asked under oath about his relationship with Lewinsky. He famously denied having "sexual relations" with her. This denial would become the legal linchpin of the scandal. It wasn't just about infidelity; it was about lying under oath. The mainstream media initially ignored the story. But on January 17, 1998, the little-known online gossip columnist Matt Drudge of The Drudge Report published a bombshell headline: "Newsweek Killed Story on White House Intern." Drudge revealed that Newsweek magazine had reporters on the story but had held it back for fact-checking and legal concerns.