Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Eddie Bernice Johnson.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Eddie Bernice Johnson is an American politician who represents Texas's 30th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives. Johnson is a member of the Democratic Party.
We're going to have to look very seriously at what we're doing right or wrong because we just keep losing.
We have to think about the future and what it is we want to accomplish from this party.
During the election, I had three male opponents and we went into a runoff. The front runner for the men was a native of Dallas who had run at large before, but I had a higher profile than him from my community service.
When you have this many losses, you don't have a following.
Within a month I announced I was going to start this initiative: A World of Women for World Peace.
As lawmakers, we must assure the people of America that our nation will not experience the nightmare of the 2000 presidential election.
There are still traces of discrimination against race and gender, but it's a lot different than when I started out. It just comes quietly, slowly, sometimes so quietly that you don't realize it until you start looking back.
It takes ground activity to stimulate that Black vote.
The health effects of air pollution imperil human lives. This fact is well-documented.
Dallas was a Black and White society at that time; it didn't have the diversity it has now.
Our first phase was inviting all the women Ambassadors who were here from other countries and trying to get in touch with all the peace centers around the country in order to focus on increasing the volume and activity toward peace.
I said we needed to organize women around the world to push peace.
Our second phase was to develop a school curriculum that teaches tolerance, respect for differences, conflict resolution, anger management, and other attributes of peace.
I'm not the only one who feels the sting of continually losing.
All issues are women's issues - and there are several that are just women's business.
I came up in a family oriented towards the sick, so I always felt an obligation for doing something.
I try hard to convince them it's important - but there's a history of discomfort with minorities voting in some parts of this country, so most especially the older people have to get accustomed to it.
We can't go all over the world killing people because we disagree with them.
Generally speaking, historically in this country, the care of a child has been thought of as female business.
There is not an issue that a woman cannot bring a perspective to.
This was the first time a woman in Dallas had won public office of any kind - even women questioned whether or not I was qualified, whether or not I could take it.
Well, I happen to believe all business is female business.
Right after 9/11 there was a magazine with a cover of kids, mostly 12-14 year-olds, who were being trained for military combat. I thought that this had just gone too far.