I'd like to be remembered as somebody who tried to promote justice.
— Neil Kinnock
I'm the guy everybody wanted to live next door. They just didn't want me to be prime minister.
People, even independently minded people, do to an extent draw their impressions from what they are told, especially if they are told it incessantly by newspapers.
Is Tony Blair of the Labour party? The answer to that is profoundly 'yes', but that is not how, sentimentally, he is regarded in the Labour movement generally.
People who are in politics to be right all the time would be better off taking up fly-fishing. It's less dangerous. Politics that is not applied in the real world and doesn't address the real challenges and paradoxes and agonies is a hobby.
I would die for my country but I could never let my country die for me.
The enemy of idealism is zealotry.
The Parthenon without the marbles is like a smile with a tooth missing.
There are politicians who seethe with ambition all the time, and there are a lot of other politicians who don't. I'm in the second category, that's all.
My first real experience of ambition was as party leader. It was my ambition for Labour to win, in which event I would be prime minister.
Newspapers are tutors as well as informers.
I take notice of those who have argued consistently for the modernisation of the E.U., but so many of the skeptics in Britain are just hostile to the whole European idea.
No prime minister in Britain will ever be able to go to war without the endorsement of a majority of the House of Commons.
I warn you not to be ordinary, I warn you not to be young, I warn you not to fall ill, and I warn you not to grow old.
You cannot fashion a wit out of two half-wits.
If we are going to have a bicameral parliament, I think there should always be a reserved place for people whose background and experience are critical to the welfare of the nation.
I didn't call for a ballot at the start of the miners' strike in 1984. I'll regret that until my dying day.
In the U.K. the far Right is a stain on society and there is a cultural resistance to it.
The unforgivable political sin is vanity; the killer diet is sour grapes.
Margaret Thatcher was not a malicious person. She was a person who couldn't see, or didn't want to see, the unfairness and disadvantaging consequences of the application of what she thought to be a renewing ideology.
Do something that makes a difference - because, by God, there's a lot to make you angry.
Loyalty is a fine quality, but in excess it fills political graveyards.