I don't fit into the traditional Republican box that the wingnuts who have hijacked my party think all Republicans should.
— Meghan McCain
I'm not intimidated by anyone.
If you're a public figure, and if you're working in the White House, you should expect everything you're saying in any context to be leaked.
My father is gone, and I miss him as only an adoring daughter can.
I don't go to journalists' houses and start dishing about anything private.
It is really hard not to love Whoopi Goldberg.
I'm a nonstop extrovert, a people person who loves mingling and gabbing and getting out in the world.
My dad's about character and bipartisanship and something greater than yourself and believing in this country and believing in the fact that we as Americans can still come together, and that's something I grew up in and feeds me every day.
I just think I'm the average all-American girl.
I make my living talking about serious subject matter, but I'm a weirdo.
I love tattoos.
My family is really good at letting go of things and moving on.
Every day of my life, I come against a conservative who wants me to shut up. I do believe I'm right and they are wrong.
When I'm 100 years old, if I make it that long, when I die, probably the first tag line will be John McCain's daughter, and I'm so proud of him and proud of my family's legacy and our life, so I don't have a problem with it.
My father's legacy is going to be talked about for hundreds and hundreds of years.
You're nobody unless you have a gay rumor about you. I've been hit on by women from time to time, and it might simplify my life if I were gay, but no.
I can't give into hate. It's too great a burden to bear. I have to stick with love.
I'm so thankful to Fox News for the chance to be on 'Outnumbered,' but I'm leaving to focus on other things. I have no doubt the show will continue to do well and wish all my friends and colleagues at the network nothing but success.
The America of John McCain is generous and welcoming and bold.
I want to say that since my dad has been diagnosed, I really feel like I understand the meaning of life, and it is not how you die: it is how you live.
My father's passing comes with sorrow and grief for me, for my mother, for my brothers, and for my sisters. He was a great fire who burned bright, and we lived in his light and warmth for so very long.
My father is the sun in my universe.
I know what kind of books I read on vacation, and it is not necessarily 'Diplomacy' by Henry Kissinger. No disrespect to that book; I have read that book. But not on spring break.
I grew up in a border state. I think immigration is an essential part of American history and American culture.
I do consider myself a postfeminist. I just want women to have choices - they can be CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, or they can be stay-at-home mothers and raise their kids as a job.
I consume media in a very frenetic, overtweeting way.
People expect me to live in a picture-perfect Pottery Barn kind of place, but I don't like anything traditional.
I was raised in an open-minded home. I was raised a Christian, but I was raised open-minded Christian - one to accept people, love people, not pass judgment.
My experience is authenticity and honesty always works best with people my age and younger, and even older. Millennials specifically really respond to keeping it real about your opinions.
I couldn't live my life the way I do if my parents weren't supportive.
I can't really regret things; you just have to move on and live your life.
Ashlee Simpson kicking her dressing room door after getting caught lip-synching - that was interesting to watch.
Hell would freeze over before I would do a reality show. I've been offered everything you could possibly imagine, and it just doesn't interest me. You certainly won't see me dancing on TV.
I really try every day. I really try to come into work thinking about what rhetoric I'm going to put out in the world and what my father would've done if he was still here.
I really like working with people who believe what they're saying.
The America of John McCain has no need to be made great again because America was always great.
I don't think I suffer from Trump derangement syndrome in a sense that I can separate the man from the White House.
I was with my father at his end, as he was with me at my beginning. In the thirty-three years we shared together, he raised me, taught me, corrected me, comforted me, encouraged me, and supported me in all things.
The White House isn't the only platform with a voice. ABC has a pretty big voice, too.
I'm friends with people that probably would describe themselves as socialists and people that are much more conservative than I am. I can always find a middle ground.
I'm not scared of death anymore.
As a general rule, I wouldn't put anything in a text or e-mail or on social media that I wouldn't want the whole world to see.
I spend a lot of time dancing in gay bars and want my gay friends to be able to get married, but I don't know if I ever want to get married and have kids. And I think that's a common struggle.
I can't cook, unless you want Cheez Whiz on a Ritz cracker.
I consider myself a progressive Republican. I am liberal on social issues.
I do believe that unless we start reaching out to minorities and women and honestly start supporting the LGBT community, there is no more future for the Republican party.
There are people I know who love President Trump and think that he's the greatest thing that's ever happened to America. I understand those people. I'm not shocked by them. I defend their right to love him. But I do think character and rhetoric matter.
Some fathers raise their daughters to be seen and not heard; they raise their daughters not to speak out. Raise strong women!
I'm not private about anything.
I don't take private phone calls from the Trump Administration anymore.