Quotes from Lamar Alexander


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I remember when President Bush, George W. Bush, came into office, he focused on No Child Left Behind, and with - and before very long, suddenly, Republicans were thought of as being as interested and as competent in education as Democrats, and why? Because they were talking about it and doing something about it.


I think, I think we need a Republican president from the real world to remind ourselves sometimes of what we need to do.


I've got a new rule. It'll be rule No. 312. If it's three days before a campaign, don't believe anything new you hear about anybody.


If you have a solution to immigration, it is possible to come home and defend it.


In the Senate, where 60 votes are required to do anything important, you have to work with your colleagues on both sides of the aisle.


Sooner or later, I need to begin to do what any candidate does in a presidential race; I need to begin to win.


The composition of the primary is so different than when I was first elected governor in 1978.


When I get close to an election, I look to 'Lamar Alexander's Little Plaid Book' for inspiration.


When I was governor, I was looking for a way to unify our state. I realized music is about the only thing that unifies Tennessee.


I think higher education is over-regulated.


I think Americans are - particularly, independent voters are looking at Washington, and they see too many taxes, too much spending, too much debt, too many Washington takeovers, and they want to provide a check and a balance to what they see as a runaway, overreaching Washington government.


I think people are looking for a president who has views and who sticks to those views. So, I think Governor Romney, Governor Perry, Governor Huntsman are all terrific candidates. I think we got a chance to elect a real, executive leader.


I think there are too many bosses in Washington telling Nashville Diesel College and Harvard University how to run - how to run their campuses, and I'd like to reduce the number of Washington regulations on higher education and keep this marketplace of wonderful institutions among which students can choose; that's oriented toward job growth.


If the administration asks for $5 and Congress appropriates $4, that's what they get. If the government creates a subterfuge by going outside the government to raise money through a private entity, that's a violation of the law.


Most people who get in trouble in politics usually get in trouble because they're disconnected from the people they serve, and I don't think anybody in Tennessee, even people who won't vote for me, would accuse me of that.


President Bush and I had asked Congress to appropriate a half-billion dollars to school vouchers. We didn't get it, and we were disappointed. But we did not go out and form a corporation to pay for it. That would have been a problem.


Primarily, we need to change 100 years of thinking, where we try to extend the promise of American life by moving things to Washington, and let's move it the other way: less of Washington, more from ourselves.


The main interest of most members of the Christian Coalition is the breakdown of the family. I think that's our biggest problem, and if the whole country was as concerned and active in issues of the family as members of the Christian Coalition are, we'd probably be better off as a country.


The goal with a big piece of social legislation is to have a bipartisan result, so the country will accept it.


Put too many one-size-fits-all jackets on Americans and the place explodes.