Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Trump-Pence is a winner for the GOP.
If stocks are optimistic, then so am I.
Obamacare rules and mandates are job-killers.
Free market capitalism is the best path to prosperity!
Either you believe in markets, or you believe in government.
Wars breed unfairness, just as they breed collateral damage.
The government shouldn't run anything, because it cannot run anything.
In the past, I have been an immigration reformer, not a restrictionist.
Contributing to GOP unity, Pence is a churchgoing evangelical family man.
Middle-income wage earners have essentially had no pay increases since 2000.
Reduced marginal tax rates on individuals and business fosters growth every time.
For Clinton, I don't see redemption. She is a corrupt political operative of the worst kind.
I am a Reagan Republican: I believe in Free Market Capitalism; I believe in economic growth.
Facebook is a private company and, therefore, is entitled to whatever political biases it holds.
Trump promised an 'America First' foreign policy rooted in the national interest, not in nostalgia.
I'm a person who has a hard time saying no, and it gets me into trouble because I sometimes overreach.
The Bush boom is alive and well. It's finishing up its sixth splendid year with many more years to come.
We got our freedom and our liberty from the Creator, from God. That is a lesson conservatives have to remember.
When the now-infamous Donald Trump-Billy Bush audio feed was released, my confidence in Trump all but evaporated.
Trump has the opportunity to be the president who, like Harry Truman, redirected U.S. foreign policy for a generation.
Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama all used temporarily targeted tariffs on specific industries.
I have been accused of allegedly giving up my free-market principles in supporting some of Donald Trump's proposed policies.
Working in a bipartisan manner, with Congress and the support of the American people, Trump can, in fact, make America great again.
Enforcing trade deals is spot on. Acting in the interest of American workers is correct. But large-scale tariffs are a terrible idea.
I am continuing to explore a run in the Senate from Connecticut, absolutely exploring it. In fact, I would say exploring it intensely.
It turns out that Donald Trump has been very good at buying low and selling high, and it helps account for his amazing business success.
I don't want to be partisan here. But please, tell me how you get out of a business recession by raising business taxes and regulations?
President Obama always gives lip service to lowering the corporate tax rate, but he never specifies a particular rate or an overall plan.
Nobody, in my lifetime, in either party, has reached out with a message of hope, growth and opportunity to minorities better than Jack Kemp.
On immigration, Trump needs an articulate policy that aims to secure the border and keep out illegals while letting in skilled legal workers.
It is freedom that makes this the greatest country in the world. And it is freedom that so frequently keeps me on the optimistic side of life.
However Donald Trump came upon the foreign policy views he espoused, they were as crucial to his election as his views on trade and the border.
I argued for a wartime moratorium on new visas and new immigrants because of the substantial danger of ISIS terrorists infiltrating our system.
Yes, there should be tough border security. Yes, there should be foolproof ID cards, with biometrics, for Social Security and employment purposes.
I am not a politician; I've never run for anything in my life. I'm an economist. I'm a broadcaster. I've been an adviser. I worked for Ronald Reagan.
New tech explosions create winners and losers, but overall are remarkably positive for the country, middle-class folks, the economy, jobs, and wages.
Obama and Clinton wrongly believe that the corporate income tax is a tax on the rich. The reality is that rich corporations don't pay taxes - workers do.
True enough, the Fed needs radical reforms. In particular, it needs to replace its failed forecasting models and be rid of the academics who overwhelm the Fed system.
JFK and Reagan's growth model included tax cuts and a steady dollar. Trump has taken a gigantic step toward restoring prosperity with his tax-cut-centered fiscal policy.
The eligibility for food stamps has widened and widened; welfare has been widened - unemployment insurance and disability insurance. These are all incentives not to work.
States with high and rising tax burdens are more likely to suffer economic decline; those with low and falling tax burdens are more likely to enjoy strong economic growth.
After World War II, we awoke to find our wartime ally, Stalin, had emerged as a greater enemy than Germany or Japan. Stalin's empire stretched from the Elbe to the Pacific.
Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results when, in fact, the results never change, is one definition of insanity. That goes for economics, too.
The E.U. needs Britain more than Britain needs the E.U. The London Stock Exchange is one of the most powerful financial centers in the world. Frankfurt will never replace it.
Trump's corporate tax reform would restore America's position as the most hospitable investment climate in the world. For a change, businesses and their cash would come back home.
In Indiana, which has been hard hit by manufacturing losses, job declines, and shrinking wages, Governor Pence combined tax cuts with spending restraint to spur the Hoosier economy.
Hillary is not an agent of change. Nor does she have any idea how to restore rapid economic growth. Instead, she is a prisoner of the Left. Tax the rich, inequality, redistribution.
My crash and burn over drugs and alcohol is very well known; I've never, ever hidden that story. If there are people who would not vote for me because of that history, I understand.
Former Sen. Alan Simpson of Wyoming, the co-author of the 1986 Simpson-Mazzoli immigration reform bill, has said the failure of that bill was a function of the lack of an ID card system.
Does anybody remember, back in the depths of the recession of 1981-82, how President Reagan kept his chin up and exhorted American businesses to work hard and produce an economic recovery?