Top 49 Quotes & Sayings by Carol Moseley Braun

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Carol Moseley Braun.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Carol Moseley Braun

Carol Elizabeth Moseley Braun, also sometimes Moseley-Braun, is a former U.S. Senator, an American diplomat, politician, and lawyer who represented Illinois in the United States Senate from 1993 to 1999. Prior to her Senate tenure, Moseley Braun was a member of the Illinois House of Representatives from 1979 to 1988 and served as Cook County Recorder of Deeds from 1988 to 1992. She was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1992 after defeating Senator Alan Dixon in a Democratic primary. Moseley Braun served one term in the Senate and was defeated by Republican Peter Fitzgerald in 1998.

The fact is that the diversity in this political class serves the same interest as diversity in any arena, which is it stirs the competitive pot.
New Zealand, by the way, where I was ambassador, has had two women prime ministers - one from either party.
And frankly, being a woman I think gives me a slightly different take on a lot of the issues and on a lot of the solutions to the problems we face. — © Carol Moseley Braun
And frankly, being a woman I think gives me a slightly different take on a lot of the issues and on a lot of the solutions to the problems we face.
The failure in Ohio to have adequate voting capacity for the people who were registered and eligible to vote was an absolute denial of their right to vote.
I'm used to people not paying me a whole lot of attention and underestimating me and, frankly, for me a big challenge is to have people believe that I can be the president of the United States.
We're failing our children with education, we're failing our environment.
All I really want to be is boring. When people talk about me, I'd like them to say, Carol's basically a short Bill Bradley. Or, Carol's kind of like Al Gore in a skirt.
I really think that's the key, part of the spiritual renewal that America needs to have, the notion that we really can have confidence in a better tomorrow.
Bush is giving the rich a tax cut instead of putting that cut in the pockets of working people.
The reason that minorities and women don't have a better shot at getting elected to the Senate or to statewide office is because the campaign finance rules are so skewed as to make it very difficult for non-traditional candidates to raise the money necessary to get elected.
It's not impossible for a woman - a Black woman - to become President.
The really important victory of the civil rights movement was that it made racism unpopular, whereas a generation ago at the turn of the last century, you had to embrace racism to get elected to anything.
There are a number of steps that we can take to reinvigorate and rebuild the economic and the physical infrastructure of our country and then to rebuild us, frankly, on a spiritual level.
So I think that if we want to have a Congress, if we want to have government that looks like America, if we want to have government that is truly a representative Democracy, then we need to clearly address how we get our campaign laws out of the way of Democracy.
I think Americans want to believe in this country again. — © Carol Moseley Braun
I think Americans want to believe in this country again.
I think that we have a responsibility to make certain that we are fiscally responsible in order to assure, frankly, future generations don't have to pay our bills.
The notion that we won the war against Iraq is like saying we won a war against Arizona. I mean, the fact of the matter is it's not that big of a country. Nobody, I don't think, had any notion that we would do anything but win it.
If we can rebuild Iraq, we can rebuild Illinois and Indiana and if we can do Baghdad, we can do Baltimore.
I was the only person of color in the Senate, and my colleagues were Strom Thurmond, Jesse Helms and Trent Lott.
Illinois has less than a 12 percent black population and I won with 55 percent of the vote.
I believe that our message of rebuilding America is one that will resonate with the American people.
I think if we are actually going to accept our generation's responsibility, that's going to mean that we give our children no less retirement security than we inherited from our parents.
Well, if you pick a fight with somebody that's smaller than you and you beat them, where's the honor in that?
I'm a results-oriented person and my Senate record shows that.
We must invest in infrastructure development and rebuilding communities to create jobs.
I want to rebuild America.
I was very productive as a senator for my state.
I think it does suggest that the American people really do want to listen to somebody who actually has some solutions, some answers, and gives them some hope.
I'm committed to universal health coverage and education.
Magic lies in challenging what seems impossible.
To me, that means getting back to the point where our Constitution means that you don't tap people's phones and poke into their e-mail and you don't arrest people and keep them hidden for a year and a half without charging them.
People just want to hear some common sense... and I bring to bear the experience in local government and state government and national government - I was the first woman in history on the Senate Finance Committee - not to mention the diplomatic international experience.
I think the legacy of the civil rights movement is that now whites are more open to being represented by people of color or people who are women or, again, non-traditional candidates.
I'd come back after having served as ambassador to New Zealand and found that I had real concerns about the direction in which this country was headed. — © Carol Moseley Braun
I'd come back after having served as ambassador to New Zealand and found that I had real concerns about the direction in which this country was headed.
I want people who believe in my message and where I am on issues to support me.
My parents were always philosophizing about how to bring about change. To me, people who didn't try to make the world a better place were strange.
I've always maintained that black people and women suffer from a presumption of incompetence. The burdens of proof are different. It just gets so tiresome.
If I lose, I'm going to retire from politics, practice law, and wear bright leather pants.
I am determined to try to rebuild and renew this country in ways that will build community and level the playing field. To me, that means making certain that the fight to preserve our civil liberties is waged, making certain the fight against discrimination is waged, making certain that women have opportunity in this country.
Im committed to universal health coverage and education.
The reason that minorities and women dont have a better shot at getting elected to the Senate or to statewide office is because the campaign finance rules are so skewed as to make it very difficult for non-traditional candidates to raise the money necessary to get elected.
There are no permanent friends or permanent enemies, just permanent interests.
The Islamic community today is faced with a new version of an old struggle. My late mother used to say it doesn't matter whether you came to this country on the Mayflower or on a slave ship, through Ellis Island or the Rio Grande. We're all in the same boat now.
I think its time to get a reapportionment process that frankly takes out the incumbency protection and the raw politics of the process.
Defining myself, as opposed to being defined by others, is one of the most difficult challenges I face. — © Carol Moseley Braun
Defining myself, as opposed to being defined by others, is one of the most difficult challenges I face.
It's time to take the 'Men Only' sign off the White House door.
There are those who would keep us slipping back into the darkness of division, into the snake pit of racial hatred, of racial antagonism and of support for symbols of the struggle to keep African-Americans in bondage.
It's hard to be the first. It's almost as if I'm subject to a different level of inspection.
We have gone into a war, an unelected president sending us into a war that the Congress frankly had no right, I believe, to authorize.
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