I won't criticise anyone else's statements, and the public will make up their own minds. And if the public think that any side or any individual has strayed too far away from what's expected of public representatives, then they'll make that judgement.
— Michael Gove
The first thing I would like to say is that I don't think folk at Westminster - or for that matter at Holyrood - constitute an elite. They are representatives who are elected and who are at the service of voters who can fire them.
Too many people go to university.
I don't think there will be a recession as a result of a vote to leave.
I sometimes think that the In campaign appears to be operating to a script written by George R.R. Martin and Stephen King - Brexit would mean a combination of 'A Feast for Crows' and 'Misery.'
I don't think I'm a revolutionary, and I'd certainly be an unlikely one.
If you vote to leave the E.U.... we will have additional flexibility to help industries who really need it.
I believe that the decisions which govern all our lives, the laws we must all obey, and the taxes we must all pay should be decided by people we choose and who we can throw out if we want change.
I have specifically argued that we need to change our relationship with the European Union by fundamentally reforming not just our relationship but the European Union itself.
I want people to concentrate not on my job but on their jobs.
Anyone who's working in manufacturing here should know they will have increased opportunities if we leave the European Union.
Traditional Anglicans - whether in Nigeria or Nottingham - have been wary, at best, of the acceptance and welcome given to gay men and women and their sexual choices by secular society.
Whether we vote to leave or remain, there are risks to our future; there are challenges in the global economy.
I'm not interested in defending the position of those who already have money, power and privilege.
I prefer to take the view of businesspeople who are actually generating jobs and creating wealth.
Barack Obama would never accept a court in Mexico decreeing what the law in the United States would be.
I'm one of many who have seen their parents and their friends lose their jobs, lose their income, lose their livelihood because of the European Union.
I just think it is entirely normal for the United Kingdom to be an independent nation state.
Life would have been easier for me if I had taken the path of least resistance.
I am on the side of the people.
There are economic risks if we leave, economic risks if we remain.
Democratic self-government has manifestly brought benefits to India, Japan, Norway, Switzerland, South Africa, South Korea, and scores of nations all making their way in the world.
I see education in the U.K. as a civil rights struggle.
The free market is not a god; we have to do everything we can to make the market competitive.
I was encouraged to stand for Parliament by David Cameron, and he has given me the opportunity to serve in what I believe is a great, reforming government. I think he is an outstanding Prime Minister.
I believed and hoped that we would be able to secure a deal with Europe which would enable us to amend free movement.
I will do exactly as the Prime Minister asks me.
In my view, our immigration policy means that we have some people who can come into this country - who we might want to say no to - and others, who we might want to attract, who can't currently come in.
I think the depressing litany of projections about World War Three and global Brexit recession we hear from the Remain side is not the sort of approach we should take into the future.
The decision to trigger Article 50 is in the hands of the next prime minister. If that is me, I will make a judgement as to when is right for Britain, and I won't be hurried or hassled by anyone into pressing that button or triggering that article until I believe it is right for this country.
We have, in the E.U., a market rigged in favour of the rich and stacked against the poor, and I think that's wrong.
There are all sorts of people who will say disobliging things about me. I don't mind that. I would rather people said, 'This is a man that sticks to his principles, not a man who's worried about popularity.'
I think the people in this country have had enough of experts with organisations from acronyms saying that they know what is best and getting it consistently wrong.
The people who are backing the Remain campaign are people who have done very well, thank you, out of the European Union.
There is no prospect of any of us being able to kick out any of the presidents of Europe; they operate in a sphere and a realm well away from and out of reach of and out of touch with the people.
The reason why I'm in Parliament is not really to see my colleagues win power; it is to see us at last in a position where we can give it up.
I absolutely think that David Cameron should stay, whatever the result of the referendum, and I hope that he will stay for the full second term which he was elected to serve.
What's a fact is that we give more than £350 million to the European Union and hand over control of that money to the European Union every week.
I absolutely haven't set out to burnish a reputation as a macho figure by picking fights.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the Conservative cabinet was called Hotel Cecil.
The ability to choose who governs us, and the freedom to change laws we do not like, were secured for us in the past by radicals and liberals who took power from unaccountable elites and placed it in the hands of the people.
No-one is forced to stand for Parliament; no-one is compelled to become a minister. If you take on those roles, which are great privileges, you also take on big responsibilities.
Making promises and then saddling yourself with a political system and a political union that means that you cannot deliver those promises, I fear, doesn't contribute to an atmosphere of trust and confidence in politics.
Optimists - people who believe in Britain, who believe in democracy - they're the people I believe who will vote for us to leave and take back control.
There aren't many contemporary Christian leaders who are both energetic in their condemnation of the crimes of communism and robust in their analysis of the evil of Islamism, but Justin Welby stands out.
My view is that those challenges will be easier to meet, those risks will be less if we vote to leave because we will have control of the economic levers; we will have control over money we send to the European Union. We will have control over our own laws, and as a result, we will be able to deal with whatever the world throws at us.
What I think is wrong is spending £9m of taxpayers' money on one particular piece of one-sided propaganda.
Jamie Dimon and J.P. Morgan are contributing millions to the Remain campaign because they do very nicely, thank you, out of the E.U.
My judgment about what is right for this country will always guide me.
Don't belittle the hurt that has been caused by the job-destroying machine that is the European Union.