Family responsibility, yes, and always. Family bankruptcy due to the cruel rules of government, no.
I’m shocked at the sexism and double standard coming out of the far right.
I truly believe that before I retire from public office, I’ll be voting for a woman for president.
In American Society today, we need to have volunteerism. I truly believe that it is the glue that will hold us together and it will be the energy that will take us into the 21st century.
The family is not only a living arrangement. It has always been a symbol of survival.
I will fight in the United States Senate this year to fund a servicing mission to Hubble by 2008, a mission that would potentially increase Hubbles power and efficiency by a factor of 10 and allow us to look back almost to the beginning of the universe.
I would like to be the first ambassador to the United States from the United States.
I am emphatically against the privatization of Social Security. It is going to hurt millions of American women, American families and ultimately the whole country.
Every vote counts and every vote must be counted.
America must continue diplomacy, even as we continue the war, to expand the coalition of the willing to share the burden of war and to share the responsibility and the economic cost of rebuilding Iraq.
When you’re up in Maine, there is Canada, I mean it’s looking right at you; it’s a different viewpoint.
I think George Mitchell believed in promoting women.
Martha Pope herself is a legend within the institution, and he was enormously supportive. And me and the women candidates.
I would say that in some ways George Mitchell is kind of an old fashioned guy, in terms of these basic values, but he was a very modern person, encouraging, he was not only accepting but he was actually encouraging.
One hundred thousand dollars was the bridge that enabled me to go on TV, not miss a beat or miss an opportunity, and raise then my own money to carry me forth. And that’s how I got to be the first Democratic woman in the United States Senate’s history.
I think George Mitchell was good for Maryland in the sense that he helped me get elected. It doesn’t get any better than that from here on.
People had so much respect for George Mitchell. They wanted to cooperate with him. I think that’s a hallmark of a very good leader.
I would say George Mitchell was like Clark Kent sometimes with his horn rimmed glasses and his very quiet manner. People say, well, he’s just a quiet leader, but then he emerges as super hero and begins to move this legislation. He led by example.
Nothing really happened – I was elected in ’86 – until 1992, and that’s when the Anita Hill debacle happened.
Look how Bill Cohen and George Mitchell worked together. It’s the stuff of legends. And now it’s the stuff of almost ancient history, regrettably, but the way those two really worked together.