It is not my policy to hit voters during the election.
You would be surprised how effective, at least for influencing low-information voters, negative propaganda about me is.
Raised some taxes based on court orders and voter approval.
I just think that the independent voters are going to take their time and look at both candidates.
I'm appealing to voters by actually telling the truth.
How it is that within 60 days of a general election issue, groups can no longer tell voters that a Member of Congress votes pro-abortion, against guns, against the environment or whatever else is beyond me.
Local television and local TV news isn't telling the voters about local candidates.
Politicians must let voters know what they think about issues before the election. Judges should not.
I think it's much harder for anybody who voted Remain to have credibility amongst the voters who voted to leave in terms of leading the country. It's not impossible, but it's much harder.
The way Obama voters and non-Obama voters deal with unemployment are a very different.
[Hillary] Clinton has also struggled with key groups of voters.
What all these lofty and vague phrases boil down to is that the court can impose things that the voters don't want and the Constitution does not require, but which are in vogue in circles to which the court responds.
In a moment when young black voters were key to the election and the reelection of a black president, when the Department of Justice has been led these years by the first two African-American attorneys general, when many big cities boast African-American league prosecutors and police chiefs and mayors, even in this moment, why is it that it still feels to so many young people that there is more power for change on the court than in the courts?
Well look, I don't begrudge anybody in the voters and their views.
I think what Obama does more than his amazing speaking ability is he's able to connect with voters. And it's that hope that he brings out in American citizens that we are all hungry for, that people get excited about Sen. Obama.
The trouble with democracy is that 50 percent of the voters are below average.
I want everyone to vote. I want everyone to be a part of electing officials. Because when we are not a part, when we don't have a very broad voter base, then we don't have true representation.
Donald Trump is actually doing what Bernie Sanders was billed as doing. He's doing new voters into the process.
Republicans would have preferred the court overturn the health care bill, an act that would have underscored Obama's biggest liability - the perception among voters, including those who like and trust him, that he has been ineffective.
We've got 50 percent voter turnout for presidential elections. That's appalling. We can do so much better.