Socks, the Clintons’ White House cat, dies
By KASEY JONES
Associated Press Writer
BALTIMORE (AP) — Socks, the White House cat during the Clinton administration 
who waged war on Buddy the pup, has died. He was around 18.
Socks had lived with Bill Clinton’s secretary, Betty Currie, in Hollywood, Md., 
since the Clintons left the White House in early 2001.
Currie confirmed Socks’ death Friday evening and said she was “heartbroken.” 
She did not give details, referring calls to the Clinton Foundation office.
The foundation released a statement from the Clintons:
“Socks brought much happiness to Chelsea and us over the years, and enjoyment 
to kids and cat lovers everywhere. We’re grateful for those memories, and we 
especially want to thank our good friend, Betty Currie, for taking such loving 
care of Socks for so many years.”
Socks had reached his late teens — an advanced age for a cat — when reports 
surfaced in late 2008 that he had cancer and Currie had ruled out invasive 
efforts to prolong his life.
“It’s not a happy prognosis,” presidential historian Barry Landau, a friend of 
Currie’s, said at the time.
Socks was what feline-lovers call a tuxedo cat — mostly black with white down 
the front and belly and on his feet, suggesting a fashionable dandy in a black 
satin evening jacket with a snowy shirt peeping out. He had markings that 
looked a bit like a mustache and goatee.
Chelsea Clinton’s pet first appeared in the news in November 1992 after 
then-Gov. Bill Clinton won the presidency and the family was the still in the 
governor’s mansion in Little Rock, Ark. Socks became an early symbol of 
privacy-vs.-media in the Clinton era when photographers got a little aggressive 
as he took a stroll outside.
Life changed for Socks in the White House, when his easy access to the 
out-of-doors was necessarily curtailed. One official conceded that, yes, Socks 
was on a leash while outside.
Things took a turn for the worse in late 1997, when then-puppy Buddy, a 
chocolate retriever, arrived. Relations between Socks and Buddy were cool from 
the beginning.
“I’m trying to work that out,” Clinton joked at the time. “It’s going to take a 
while. It’s kind of like peace in Ireland or the Middle East.”
A few weeks later, in early 1998, the two pets had an encounter on the South 
Lawn. “A very agitated Buddy approached the cat and began barking as the 
president restrained him with a green leash,” The Associated Press reported. 
“Socks, hair raised high, stood his ground until Clinton and Buddy made their 
exit to the Oval Office.”
But their pairing enchanted pet lovers, especially children. In 1998, 
then-first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton put out a book of children’s letters to 
the two pets in “Dear Socks, Dear Buddy.”
“Can you please send me a picture and a paw print,” one youngster wrote Socks. 
“Do you have fleas? I think my cat has fleas.”
In the book, the first lady wrote she had been taking daughter Chelsea to a 
piano lesson in spring 1991 when they spotted two kittens in the music 
teacher’s front yard. “The black one with white paws — Socks — jumped right 
into (Chelsea’s) arms,” she wrote.
After the Clintons left in early 2001, Socks moved in with Currie. Buddy, 
meanwhile, made the move with the Clintons to Chappaqua, N.Y., but he was 
struck and killed by a car the following year.
Socks continued to live quietly with Currie, sometimes making appearances at 
programs held by pet welfare groups. Landau said Socks enjoyed sitting in the 
sun and that Currie doted on him, cooking him special chicken dinners.
Coincidentally, the White House cat in the Bush era, India, died Jan. 4 at 18, 
just weeks before Bush left office. Bush daughter Barbara, then 9, named the 
shorthaired black cat after former Texas Rangers player Ruben Sierra, nicknamed 
El Indio.
Like Socks, India had to share the White House with the canine side: the 
Bushes’ Scottish terriers, Barney and Miss Beazley, who were immortalized in 
Internet videos.
———
Associated Press writer Polly Anderson in New York contributed to this report.



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