Top 42 Quotes & Sayings by Edward Brooke

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Edward Brooke.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Edward Brooke

Edward William Brooke III was an American politician of the Republican Party, who represented Massachusetts in the United States Senate from 1967 until 1979. Prior to serving in the senate, he served as the Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts from 1963 until 1967. Following his election in 1966, he became the first African American popularly elected to the United States Senate. Born to a middle-class black family, Brooke was raised in Washington, D.C.. He graduated from the Boston University School of Law in 1948, after serving in the United States Army during World War II. Beginning in 1950, he became involved in politics, when he ran for a seat in the Massachusetts House of Representatives. After serving as chairman of the Finance Commission of Boston, Brooke was elected attorney general in 1962, becoming the first African-American to be elected attorney general of any state.

Intemperance and intolerance serve no one, and hatred guarantees failure.
I had male breast cancer and had dual radical modified mastectomy, and I've spent a lot of time working with the Susan G. Komen foundation to make men aware of male breast cancer - if you have breast tissue, you can have breast cancer.
I am not a civil rights leader, and I don't profess to be one. — © Edward Brooke
I am not a civil rights leader, and I don't profess to be one.
When I arrived in the Senate, the moderate so-called Rockefeller Republicans held the balance of power.
I chose the Republican Party early on in the 1950s and 1960s in Massachusetts. My father was a Republican, as was my mother, in Virginia.
I had made my reputation on integrity.
I always believed there would be an African-American president. It was something I'd dreamed about, thought about, but certainly did not believe would happen in my lifetime.
Politics is not a tea party. When it is time to act, you have to move fast and decisively.
I was entirely comfortable reaching across the Senate aisle to work with Democrats.
The polarization of Congress; the decline of civility; and the rise of attack politics in the 1980s, the 1990s, and the early years of the new century are a blot on our political system and a disservice to the American people.
I want to be elected on my own ability. Only then do you have progress... People should not use race as a basis for labelling me.
I'm looking for the best person irregardless of political party, of race or religion, or color of their skin. Those things don't matter to me. I want someone who's qualified, who has a qualification to character and the integrity to do the things that have to be done to save this world.
I grew up segregated, but there was not much feeling of being shut out of anything. — © Edward Brooke
I grew up segregated, but there was not much feeling of being shut out of anything.
When most presidents get in, they move to the center because they realize that this is a centrist country - even Reagan.
When I left the Senate in 1979, there were several publishers who had approached me about writing an autobiography, and I knew that politicians write books for many reasons, but at that time, I just thought I wasn't ready and my story wasn't over, and I knew I had a new life ahead of me.
I can't serve just the Negro cause. I've got to serve all the people of Massachusetts.
I've never tried to run away from my race. I was born a black man. You know that in your bones as soon as you are able to understand this country... My approach to life about race is, I don't see the difference between black people and white people.
I was one of God's chosen few, no doubt about it. Not only being elected, but the joy and pleasure I derived from it. It was a wonderful life.
My campaign confirmed my belief that although there are bigots in America, whose hateful rhetoric seizes the media's attention, the vast majority of people do not harbor such prejudice.
President Nixon has lost his effectiveness as the leader of this country, primarily because he has lost the confidence of the people.
I never studied much at Howard, but at Boston University, I didn't do much else but study.
Richard Nixon was a very complex man. I don't think he was a conservative, nor liberal, not even a moderate. He was a pragmatic politician. He loved politics.
My fervent expectation is that sooner rather than later, the United States Senate will more closely reflect the rich diversity of this great country.
Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely, and I found that out when I was Attorney General in Massachusetts.
Fred Thompson was a law partner of mine.
You can't say the Negro left the Republican Party; the Negro feels he was evicted from the Republican Party.
I wanted to go to Washington to bring people together who had never been together before. I wanted to break down the barriers between races.
I don't intend to leave the Republican Party, but I would like to move the Republican Party more to the center.
In my state, the Republican Party was the most progressive party. — © Edward Brooke
In my state, the Republican Party was the most progressive party.
Historically we have rejected extremism on the left and the right. Centrism is the right course for America.
I spent many years working for voting rights, but we still see sophisticated efforts, led by white officials, to disenfranchise black voters in local and national elections.
Election victories are a harvest. You plant the seed. For months or years, you water and tend them. In the election season, you reap the harvest.
Labels applied to people of any race are inherently offensive.
I deplored a system that made it more profitable not to work than to work. I wanted to help change all that.
To stand still is to regress.
Once bitten, you seldom lose the political bug.
When people treat corruption as a routine part of the process, you have something far worse than wrongdoing or moral failing. You have a political cancer that breeds cynicism about democratic government and infects all of society.
My parents taught me that racial prejudice is a sin, one that robs the world of great minds and talents.
The member of Congress who forgets his constituents' needs usually serves only one term. — © Edward Brooke
The member of Congress who forgets his constituents' needs usually serves only one term.
In elective politics, it's up or out. You go up the ladder, or you get out of the game.
America is the only country in the world that classifies as Negro any person who has one drop of African blood in his or her veins.
My entire life has been devoted to breaking down barriers, to finding common ground.
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