I'm not asking the public to trust me; I'm asking the public to trust themselves.
— Michael Gove
One of the reasons why Australia and Canada have support for migration is because they control the numbers.
I am in favour of migration; I simply want to control the numbers.
The economic basis on which Nicola Sturgeon and the Scottish nationalists made the case for separation was based on an oil price much higher than it is at the moment, so there will be no case for it.
Ed Balls keeps saying that we are committed to scrapping the EMA. I have never said this. We won't.
Our security and sovereignty stand together.
I can't foretell the future, but I don't believe that the act of leaving the European Union would make our economic position worse; I think it would make it better.
I think, instead of the pessimism of the Remain campaign, we have an opportunity to think of the next generation. If we have faith in their talent, in their generosity, in their hard work, we can, if we leave the E.U., ensure the next generation makes this country once more truly great.
I was very lucky in that I had a couple of teachers who were particularly supportive.
I recognise that fishing is perhaps not the most high-employment industry in this country, but it's a symbol of what we lost when we entered the E.U.: control over national resources that, if we retained them, we could have husbanded in our interest and, indeed, in the interest of others.
The next leader of this country needs to be someone who believes heart and soul that Britain should be outside the European Union.
The Government wants to give young people from every community the chance to learn about the heroism and sacrifice of our great-grandparents, which is why we are organising visits to the battlefields of the Western Front.
I think the principal purpose of education is to allow each of us, when we become adults, to shape our own future.
I know myself, from my own background, the E.U. depresses employment and destroys jobs. My father had a business destroyed by the common fisheries policy.
Hanging may seem barbarous, but the greater barbarity lies in the slow abandonment of our common law traditions.
Proper history teaching is being crushed under the weight of play-based pedagogy which infantilises children, teachers and our culture.
The big shift in approach on education that we are taking - which is different from what happened before - is that we trust teachers and we trust heads.
I can't influence how other parties choose to vote.
One thing is undeniable. If we are going to continue to have support for migration, we need to be able to control the numbers.
There wasn't a Scottish nationalist MP elected at any general election when we were outside the E.U.
When we vote to leave, I think a majority of people in Scotland will also vote to leave as well.
Good schools should be left alone.
I think overall our national security is strengthened if we are able to make the decisions that we need and the alliances that we believe in outside the current structures of the European Union.
People should vote for democracy, and Britain should vote for hope.
If we, in the future, have confidence in ourselves, then there's no limit to what we can achieve, and I think the depressing litany... that we hear from the Remain side is not the type of approach we should take into the future.
My parents adopted me, and then, by the age of four or five, I was asking all sorts of questions, and they found themselves with a son who was interested in the sorts of things that they valued but weren't natural to them.
The common fisheries policy essentially gave other European Union nations unfettered access to our fish stocks and - I would hope - that if we leave the European Union, we can once more see the ports of Peterborough and Fraserhead and Grimsby flourishing, because we will take back control of our territorial waters.
I put my country and my principles first.
A lot of schools benefit from parents who are first- or second-generation immigrants, who expect the best for their children.
I want people to be the authors of their own life story.
I think it's time that we said to people who are incapable of acknowledging that they've ever got anything wrong: 'I'm sorry, you've had your day.' Unelected, unaccountable elites, I'm afraid it's time to say, 'You're fired. We are going to take back control.'
Were I ever alone in the dock, I would not want to be arraigned before our flawed tribunals, knowing my freedom could be forfeit as a result of political pressures. I would prefer a fair trial, under the shadow of the noose.
I have a different starting premise from those 100 academics who are so heavily invested in the regime of low expectations and narrow horizons which they have created.
One of the problems we've had is that the ICT curriculum in the past has been written for a subject that is changing all the time. I think that what we should have is computer science in the future - and how it fits in to the curriculum is something we need to be talking to scientists, to experts in coding and to young people about.
In England, more than in any comparable country, those who are born poor are more likely to stay poor, and those who inherit privilege are more likely to pass on privilege. For those of us who believe in social justice, this stratification and segregation are morally indefensible.
I have a brother-in-law who lives in Spain.
Scottish nationalism has grown since we entered the European Union.
The people I admire most are those doing outstanding things for the poorest children, such as Michael Wilshaw at Mossbourne academy, Dan Moynihan and all those at the Harris academies, and those at chains such as Ark and the Haberdashers, who are driving up standards in the poorest areas.
I believe that there are better opportunities to keep people safe if we are outside the European Union.
I don't want to have anyone else as Prime Minister other than David Cameron, and if people spend their time thinking about some of this stuff, then they are getting in the way of two things: one, a fair, open, fact-based referendum debate; and two, the Conservative government continuing afterwards in a stable and secure fashion.
There are great things that Britain can do in the future as a progressive beacon. By voting Leave, we have that opportunity.
If events had taken a different course, I could have been one of those children going to a school without the sorts of opportunities that I've subsequently had.
I found reading Alan Bennett striking because you have this sudden flash of recognition when you read about a boy who has intellectual interests utterly different from his parents.
I wanted to put the national interest before my personal interests.
The First World War may have been a uniquely horrific war, but it was also plainly a just war.
We have the opportunity not just to choose our job or profession, but also to choose the sort of life we want to live and the imprint we will leave on others.
The majority people in this country are suffering because of our membership of the E.U.
It's the invincible arrogance of Europe's elites that gets me. These are people who have seen the euro collapse. These are people who are presiding over a migration crisis on their borders, and yet do they ever acknowledge that they need to change? No. They say they need more integration, more of our money, more control over this country.
As long as there are people in education making excuses for failure, cursing future generations with a culture of low expectations, denying children access to the best that has been thought and written, because Nemo and the Mister Men are more relevant, the battle needs to be joined.
You come home to find your 17-year-old daughter engrossed in a book. Which would delight you more - if it were 'Twilight' or 'Middlemarch?'