Top 91 Quotes & Sayings by Luther Strange - Page 2
Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Luther Strange.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
When President Trump and I arrived in Washington, there was a new sense that the crisis of illegal immigration would now be taken seriously.
The extremist agenda of the Obama administration is forcing unwarranted higher energy costs upon Americans and further threatening an already sluggish economic recovery.
Shame on Congressman Brooks for his lack of faith in President Trump's and Attorney General Sessions' commitment to work together to make America great again.
Under President Obama, we saw an unwarranted extension of amnesty programs which neglected the root of the illegal immigration crisis. We saw a troubling lack of urgency in addressing the sanctuary cities which subvert the rule of law.
I am confident that Jeff Sessions will do his part to restore the delicate balance between the states and the federal government that the Founders envisioned.
Climate change is not an excuse to give the federal government ever more power over private property and state resources.
I was proud to cast my vote for President Trump.
The fault always lies in the candidate or the head coach or the guy holding the ball.
Our religious liberty was threatened by the Obama administration as part of the Obamacare law. I was in the courtroom when that law was, I think unjustly, held constitutional.
Climate change is not an excuse to silence political speech.
I drafted and proposed a law to secure our borders and build the border wall - and make the sanctuary cities pay for it.
To suggest that the President of the United States - the head of the free world, a man who is changing the world - is being manipulated by Mitch McConnell is insulting to the president.
When my good friend Jeff Sessions endorsed Donald Trump, that was good enough for me.
George Wallace is gone; Bull Connor is dead. He's not coming back.
We rely on the rule of law. I think we've lost touch with that concept in Washington.
I am very pleased with President Trump's selection of Judge Neil Gorsuch as his first appointee to the U.S. Supreme Court.
I promised to carry on Jeff Session's legacy of fighting for the conservative values we believe in. I promised to help pass the Trump agenda and serve the people's interest, not the special interests. And I promised to help Donald Trump drain the swamp in Washington.
As a gun owner and sportsman, I am proud to join NRA members from across the country to make the voice of liberty heard.
What I see in Washington reminds me of what I saw in Montgomery when I was first elected Alabama's Attorney General. In Montgomery, corruption was the problem, so I assembled the finest public corruption prosecution team in the country. Their work wasn't always popular with the mainstream media or the local politicians. We didn't let that stop us.
The Obamacare law has failed.
Alabama and other states had a terrible record in terms of depriving people of their right to vote, making it difficult for them to vote, discriminating against people.
The Obama administration's EPA ruling to cut carbon emissions at power plants is a direct affront to workers in states like Alabama, which not only rely upon coal-fired plants to generate most of their electricity but are also home to thousands of coal industry jobs.
As attorney general, I don't get to pick and choose the laws I like and don't like.
If the federal government can mandate what we have to spend our own money on, then the federal government can make us buy something even if we are morally opposed to paying for it.
When I was attorney general, we had the strongest public integrity unit in the country.
As I have said before, our society cannot be truly prosperous until it respects the rights of the most vulnerable among us.
Climate change is not an excuse for the EPA to ignore the bounds of law and issue illegal regulations that will cost jobs, shutter industries, and have little to no positive impact on the environment.
The Obama administration demonstrated time and again a disturbing willingness to bypass the separation of powers and disregard Congress as a Constitutional watchdog.
The Second Amendment reflects the brilliance of our founders, who knew that no right is guaranteed unless we are willing to fight for it, and I remain committed to fighting for the rights of lawful gun owners as the senator for Alabama.
Debate about the causes and consequences of climate change and the policy positions taken in response to it should be encouraged, not silenced.
Governing through federal ultimatum grates against our history, traditions, and, most importantly, our Constitution.