Comedy to the Senate? Well, there certainly hasn’t been a satirist or a political satirist who’s done that. So, that really was uncharted territory during the campaign. But I think it’s a good thing. Some people thought that it was an odd career arc, but to me it made absolute sense.
Changing technologies, changing marketplaces, and even changing trends in anti-competitive practices have all presented challenges to antitrust enforcement.
What you see on the campaign trail is me. It’s easy being me.
There’s plenty of room for humor in politics, God knows, but it’s a serious business.
My dad was a terrible businessman.
My dad loved comedians, especially George Jessel, and he loved Henny Youngman and Buddy Hackett.
Minnesotans know the difference between the job of satirist and the job of senator. And so do I.
Minnesota has a proud tradition of having two Senators on the Ag committee – a tradition I’d like very much to continue.
Liberals like me love America. We just love America in a different way.
Let’s not let the government sell us out. Let’s fight for net neutrality.
Let’s keep the Internet weird. Let’s keep the Internet free.
It’s the Power of the Almighty, the Splendor of Nature, and then you.
Net neutrality has been in place since the very beginning of the Internet.
Net neutrality isn’t a government takeover of the Internet, as many of my Republican colleagues have alleged.
No one is more sensitive to the issue of overeating than the creator of Stuart Smalley.
There is – I mean – I found early in life that righteous indignation is a little off-putting, and so I try to couch it with humor.
The nature of the Internet and the importance of net neutrality is that innovation can come from everyone.
The Fourth Amendment doesn’t apply to corporations.
Terrorism, to me, is the use of terror for political purpose, and terror is indiscriminate murder of civilians to make a political point.
Progressives, in a way, are the new conservatives. We want to conserve what we fought to build.