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Jeremy Corbyn Quotes

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What I find appalling is the intrusive nature towards my extended family.

We can create a new kind of politics: kinder, more respectful, but courageous, too.

There is a self interest in voting for a society where there is health care for all, where there's a mental health service for all, where there is education service for all.

I have already said and will continue to say that I won't respond to personal abuse, and I never make any personal abuse, ever, to anybody. I just don't do that kind of politics.

I understand the principles of dissent in parliament.

In my own constituency, the benefit cap has had the effect of social cleansing: of people receiving benefit, but the benefit is capped; therefore, they can't meet the rent levels charged and are forced to move. It's devastating for children, devastating for the family and very bad for the community as a whole.

We've got to stand up for what we believe in as a labour movement. And that means the party's membership needs to be even bigger so it becomes a genuinely mass organisation.

Politically active people felt more and more disenfranchised, particularly during the ultra-New Labour years.

We live in a very unequal society.

I'm not joining in personal attacks... I don't do personal attacks.

Mum and Dad met campaigning on the Spanish civil war. Both were active peace campaigners. They died in 1986 and '87.

There is not going to be a peace process unless there is talks involving Israel, Hezbollah and Hamas, and I think everyone knows that.

We are all in the Labour party because we want the Labour party to be a vehicle for social change. There is a thirst for debate in the party, and all those who have joined haven't joined without a purpose.

If there is 'right to buy' for council tenants and housing association properties, then why shouldn't that apply to all tenants? Some landlords are decent, very caring people, but some of them are truly appalling.

Diversity in media is something that is intrinsic to a democratic society. We do not want the whole media owned by one person.

I think NATO is a Cold War product. I think NATO historically should have shut up shop in 1990 along with the Warsaw Pact; unfortunately, it didn't.

I've been in Parliament since 1983, and I've been involved in many issues over the time.

I'm a leader, not a dictator. I want to persuade people rather than threaten or control them.

I want a world of peace. I'm not interested in bombs. I'm not interested in wars. I'm interested in peace.

Tony Benn and I were very close, very close friends for 30, 40 years. We talked to each other a great deal, and we were great friends. And I was with him shortly before he died, talking about prospects of the world and prospects for peace. And I'm very sad that he's gone.

Taken slightly historically, the turning point in the E.U. was actually the Single European Act, the Thatcher/Maastricht-era stuff, which was turning the E.U. into very much a market system.

Loyalty is about the party and the movement... if you want a better and more effective party, we've got to open ourselves up much more to our membership and our supporters.

I've got lots of stamina; don't worry about that. I cycle every day - it's OK.

I think in English history a very interesting character is John Lilburne. Very interesting character because of the way he managed to develop the whole debate about the English civil war into something very different.

There is a democratic process in the party, and that can be operated at any time. But am I going to resign? No. Of course not. No. No. I will carry on.

Quite simply, I maintained contact with Sinn Fein and believed that there had to be a political, not a military, solution to the situation in Northern Ireland.

Our problem in the 2015 general election was that for all the good stuff that was in the Labour manifesto, we were still going to be freezing public sector wages, cutting council expenditure, laying off civil servants. We were offering 'austerity light' instead of a real alternative.

It is time we recognised the huge contribution that migration has made to the economic growth of this country.

Sure, I've met with people I don't agree with.

I am just an ordinary person trying to do an ordinary job.

We are not doing celebrity, personality, abusive politics - we are doing ideas. This is about hope.

It is opposition to economic orthodoxy that leads us into austerity and cuts. But it is also a thirst for something more communal, more participative. That, to me, is what is interesting in this process.

NATO expansion and Russian expansion - one leads to the other, and one reflects the other.

I find if you are in an office, the crisis finds you. If you're not in the office, the crisis finds somebody else.

I make mistakes like anybody else, I will make mistakes. And you have to reflect on it, and you have to listen to people. That is the key.

I think there's good in everybody.

The idea that somehow or other you can deal with all the problems in the world by banning a particular religious group from entering the U.S.A. is offensive and absurd.

There is nothing wrong with my heart except for wanting a peaceful world.

You grow your way to prosperity; you don't cut your way to it.

Inequality is a terrible waste of time, a waste of people's resources.

You pay more in wages, get more in in tax, you get people living a higher standard, you get more money. It's a kind of circle.

Basically, on the question of Europe, I want to see a social Europe, a cohesive Europe, a coherent Europe, not a free market Europe.

What I remain opposed to is the idea that David Cameron could go around and give up workers' rights, give up environmental protection, give up a whole load of things that are very important.

I've been quite involved in a lot of U.N. operations over the years. I was a U.N. observer at the East Timor referendum in 2000. I've been very involved in that for a long time.

I think we should all be accountable to our parties, but I also think that accountability should be a process of engagement: that MPs do engage with their constituency parties, do engage with their constituents, and MPs do change their minds on things because of local opinion.

I'm very proud of the fact that I voted against the Iraq war. And proud that I voted strongly not for students to be saddled with thousands and thousands of pounds worth of debt.

The Spanish Civil War, Britain was not involved in it. Going back a bit, there was the naval blockade to stop the slave trade in the 19th century; that was morally just. Shame they didn't bother to abolish slavery at the same time.

I'm not somebody with over-weening ambition.

I want to see a more collective style in how our party operates, in politics as a whole.

A lot of people didn't feel attracted to Labour, so they voted in desperation for other things.

I'm just a very normal person, living in north London, doing my best for my area and to put forward some serious debate on issues in the party.

I'm interested in the idea that we have a more inclusive, clearer set of objectives. I would want us to have a set of objectives which does include public ownership of some necessary things such as rail.

I think we should talk about what the objectives of the party are, whether that's restoring the Clause Four as it was originally written or it's a different one, but I think we shouldn't shy away from public participation, public investment in industry, and public control of the railways.

We're not going back anywhere, we're going forward, we're going forward in democracy, we're going forward in participation, we're going forward with ideas.

To give everyone a house and garden is very difficult in urban areas.

My view is the questions in Parliament should be the questions that people out there want asked.

I do think the public want to see politicians acting in a different way. What's brought young people into our campaign is that they were written off by political parties but they had never written off politics, and what we have is a huge number of young people, very enthusiastic and brimming with ideas. Those ideas have got to be heard.

The Parliamentary Labour Party is a crucial and very important part of the Labour party, but it is not the entirety of the Labour Party.

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