I am struck the whole litany of people, especially of that era, who were involved in some scandal or another. Some of it was sexual. Some of it was more financial. And it was just all concentrated in a lot of people all at once.
Washington is a city of money. It's a flood of money.
The failure to invest in our public transportation and public life, I think, is a scandal and a shame, and it should be a national embarrassment.
At a time when the public is sour on politicians, have no use for them, Bill Clinton has risen to a different level. Bill Clinton is endlessly interesting.
Democrats can have a different version of the line, or they can just say, no, we are the party of international peace and activism, and we're the party that's going to have a civilized capitalism.
Politics, they all - talked to the insiders.
Big money buys access in Washington, and access purchases influence. It is as simple as that. And they have basically given a green light, a further green light, after Citizens United, to the biggest money to have the bigger voice in our politics, and to sound out and drown out the voice of just ordinary citizens.
George W. Bush in 2000 went to private financing for the nomination, but he accepted public funding in the general. And, quite frankly, so did - it was broken in 2008, when Barack Obama decided he wasn't going to do that.
Ronald Reagan four times accepted the limits in contributions of what he could take, what he could spend, and the public funding for the general elections. So I just think the idea that it didn't work, and didn't work - it did work. It worked brilliantly.
If you're on the other side from me, you're not simply wrong or ill-informed or mistaken. We don't share the same country, the same values. You may not be the same kind of an American I am.
One of the first things every press secretary assures you is, the boss has a wonderful sense of humor, because not to have a sense of humor is considered flagrantly un-American.
Stronger together is, I think, a preposition and a comparative adjective, but it's not really an action verb or what it is.
I think Guantanamo, has been synonymous with the staining of American values and American legal tradition.
90 percent of American schoolchildren are in public schools. And the emphasis on private schools and charter schools and parochial schools is not unimportant.
I mean, this is a group [Republicans], don't forget, that gave its presidential straw ballot to Ron Paul, Ron Paul, and Rand Paul and Rand Paul. So, they have abandoned what - their libertarian values and instincts to embrace [Donald] Trump.
Mitt Romney was the man who stood up to Donald Trump early, hard, never wavered.
The problem is that what Donald Trump said, if you take it literally now, is cause for anxiety and nervousness.
Donald Trump is an independent presidential candidate who ran on the Republican label. He really did. He took it over. He transformed it into his image, in his likeness.
When you think of pristine preservation of America, you immediately think of Tulsa and Oklahoma.
There's never been a sense of public service about Donald Trump.
The tough thing about a campaign being over is, you lose your enemy.
The Democrats have tried the war against women in the past. It didn't really have that much traction.
Donald Trump is sounding the same theme he has sounded since May or June of 2015.
Donald Trump has taken over the Republican Party. He's transformed the Republican Party.
Franklin Roosevelt ran on a balanced budget in 1932, and the greatest president, certainly, of the 20th century. So the idea that you lay out a predicate right now, Donald Trump has recreated the Republican Party in his image.