Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Danny K. Davis.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Daniel K. Davis is an American politician who is the U.S. representative from Illinois's 7th congressional district, elected in 1996. The district serves much of western Chicago, including the Loop. It also includes several of Chicago's inner western suburbs, such as Bellwood, Oak Park, and River Forest. Davis is a Democrat, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus, and a former member of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). He was one of 31 U.S. representatives to vote against counting Ohio's electoral votes in the 2004 presidential election.
Chicago is a world-class culinary center. We need to guard that reputation and status.
I grew up in the South, and I think there are lots of people who have distorted views of the South.
We borrowed money to fight the Revolutionary War, and so there was a debt owed. We paid it. If we have done that for 235 years, if we have done it ever since this country has existed, we can do it again.
The government is what you've got. Politics is what you want.
The thing that I guess I've never understood is why people persist that I carried a crown on a pillow to Reverend Moon. I never did. I took it to his wife.
It would be wonderful to be a member of the United States Senate.
I voted proudly for the first time for John Fitzgerald Kennedy for president of the United States.
I believe in our free market system.
I've been around low-income people all of my life. I mean, growing up, low income, the community where I've chosen to live, low-income.
People crown kings and queens at homecoming parades all the time. We do a lot of things in our society that are simply symbolic.
I just want to believe that, as a citizen in this country, that I have equal protection under the law and that I can have a situation assessed fairly, that people can look at it, and that a court of law can determine what the outcome is.
I've enjoyed a great friendship and relationship and have a tremendous amount of affinity for both the Clintons... and I'd like to keep it that way.
Whether the struggle was between English merchants and the American colonies, pre Civil War northern manufacturers vs. southern slave holders, or American grain farmers and auto manufacturers seeking advantage in the Mexican agriculture and labor markets in the 1990s, U.S. policy has reflected the economic clash of interests of the day.
I have a tendency to campaign positively and campaign on issues, not try to tear someone else down.
My congressional record speaks for itself, and my ability to build coalitions locally, nationally and across the aisles in Congress is transparent.
I would jump off the Willis Tower, which is the tallest building in Chicago, to support Hillary Clinton.
I've got hundreds of friends who are police officers. I work with the police.
Sickle cell does not have the priority in this country that it had in the 1960s, when I started working on it. Congress has been cutting everything that wasn't nailed down.
Some of the huge tax breaks that we gave to the wealthiest 1 percent of the population in this country during the Bush era have contributed significantly to the deficit.
Universal coverage is a critical goal, but even if every man and woman, every parent and every child in America woke up with an insurance card in their hands, they would still need a place to go for health care.
To ensure fair competition, there must be effective controls on currency manipulation, and monopoly pricing needs to be outlawed on such items as intellectual property, especially pharmaceuticals.
#BlackLivesMatter brought a new sense of urgency, audacity, and outrage to the issue of police violence against black men that has made it impossible to ignore, to cover up, or to justify.
What the federal government can do, especially as it relates to urban, inner-city America, is invest resources that would help create jobs.
The arts are what humanize science and history.
I don't think you decree political positions.
The best protection against recidivism is a job.
In politics, you make use of every opportunity.
We have to find greater employment for these people with records.
Getting the care for a common cold, migraine, or high blood pressure can and should be easy, whether one has an insurance card or not.
One thing I always say when I discuss guns with people - if a gun is not present, it's generally more difficult to do irreparable harm.
My mother often told us that it is a poor dog that will not wag its own tail.
If people are educated, they will know what they need.
Culture is central to what makes us human.
Nothing has more impact on my district than unemployment.
You go to traffic court in many locations throughout the country, and you can spell justice - J-U-S-T dash U-S. Just us.
Strengthening our national network of Community Health Centers - one of the best kept secrets in medicine - can help counter America's growing access problem.
Trade and globalization are here to stay.
Everyone who has succeeded in correcting their wrong should have the right to work.
I try to bridge the gap between police and local communities.
Our nation's attitudes toward trade have been shaped by the evolving struggle over who has been helped and who has been disadvantaged by trade policy as our economy has developed.
The history of the African American community is one of enduring, relentless struggle with a vision of accepting nothing less than full social and economic equality.
I believe in democracy. I also believe in religious freedom.
Individuals in the South are just like individuals any place else.
Medical disenfranchisement is fueled by a host of factors that include worsening shortage of primary care doctors in needy communities and a troubling scarcity of providers willing to treat the uninsured or publicly insured. Adding to the trend are fewer medical students choosing primary care over more lucrative and specialized fields.
I'm a realist, and so we have to take what exists and continue to struggle to move forward.
Many of the young people living in inner-city America don't see themselves - I mean, they even talk about things like death and dying. And there's a tremendous loss of hope. And of all the things to lose, I think nothing is worse or more difficult to overcome than the loss of hope.
One of the things about the Constitution - that our forefathers wrote, and basically, there were none of our foremothers that were there. There were none of our fore-sisters there. There are changes that can take place, and there is room to change.
The inequality between CEO compensation and the compensation received by workers and stockholders has grown to such an extent that it endangers our economy and and our society.
I grew up in rural Arkansas, and I'm afraid that begging is not part of our characteristics.
I have a great deal of respect and affinity for Tammy Duckworth; she's a seatmate of mine. She's got heart, soul; she's a war hero.
I think life is the sum total of your experiences.
Our nation's multiculturalism is what makes us so special as a nation.
#BlackLivesMatter has raised the bar in our national dialog: Addressing economic inequality is necessary but not sufficient. It is also necessary to directly confront racial injustice.
I don't have as much money as Rahm Emanuel.
The way to reduce the deficit is to create jobs and work opportunities so that people will have money with which to pay taxes.
Middle school students are at a critical time in their lives when making good choices matters - the decisions they make in these formative years have an impact on their future success.