Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American politician Henry Cisneros.
Last updated on November 27, 2024.
Henry Gabriel Cisneros is an American politician and businessman. He served as the mayor of San Antonio, Texas, from 1981 to 1989, the second Latino mayor of a major American city and the city's first since 1842. A Democrat, Cisneros served as the 10th Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in the administration of President Bill Clinton from 1993 to 1997. As HUD Secretary, Cisneros was credited with initiating the revitalization of many public housing developments and with formulating policies that contributed to achieving the nation's highest ever rate of home ownership. In his role as the President's chief representative to the cities, Cisneros personally worked in more than two hundred cities spread over all fifty states. Cisneros's decision to leave the HUD position and not serve a second term was overshadowed by controversy involving payments to his former mistress.
I was a little lacking in vision as mayor - I failed to understand the significance that housing and the revitalization of housing means for a city.
Americans are a can-do people, an enthusiastic people, a problem-solving people. And when given a direction and given a plan, they'll sign on.
As Secretary of Housing, I do have to express alarm, signal the alarm if you will, that the potential for homelessness to grow is there.
I don't think we have any time to waste.
The cancer doesn't bother me. I have great faith that the technology will beat it.
We can either allow our youth to shoot baskets or watch them continue to shoot people.
The hurricane complicates things in that what would have been purely a business decision becomes a decision of the heart.
Place-based initiatives can provide a useful framework to judge our progress in raising people out of poverty. They allow us to see whether or not a neighborhood is improving and its residents are living better.
I dont think we have any time to waste.
Like piles of dry wood with red-hot coals underneath.
We have to be honest, we have to be truthful and speak to the one dirty secret in American life, and that is racism.
There are some benefits [that illegal aliens] clearly ought not have...[including] health benefits and welfare benefits and others that serve as a magnet attracting people here from other countries.