I think experience is a terribly overrated idea when it comes to thinking about who should become president.
President Bush in his inaugural address talked about bringing freedom to countries that don't have it. He didn't specify how.
We all learn submission because we all have 'bosses', whether we're presidents of companies or not. The easiest place to learn it is in family.
Whether it was turning around failing companies, rescuing the Olympics, or improving the business climate in Massachusetts, Mitt Romney has proven that he is ready to be president on Day One.
America needs jobs, smaller government, less spending and a president with the courage to offer more than yet another speech.
We need to change the focus from celebrating sales at the mall to celebrating the significance of President Washington's birth to the birth of our nation.
The president said nothing about the views of government in regard to the possibility of Carolinas seceding. This however was frequently spoken of by other statesmen at the North. I think they were unanimous in this, that no army would be sent here.
I learned running the government for the Presidency, which I always thought was difficult, is even more difficult than I thought.
We must lead in a different way... We must have an active president, who gives strong direction and works with the government for its implementation.
In his 4 years in the White House, President Carter worked to make the Federal Government more competent and compassionate and more responsive to the American people.
In fact, it was the women in our house who were in the saddle. If men are the gods, women are not only the presidents but all the ministers of the government.
This man called President Bush has a lot to answer for. I don't know if this man is really taking care of America. This government has been shameful.
President Reagan was elected on the promise of getting government off the backs of the people and now he demands that government wrap itself around the waists of the people.
Under the doctrine of separation of powers, the manner in which the president personally exercises his assigned executive powers is not subject to questioning by another branch of government.
The government is already into our lives a whole lot more than they should be. If I were president, I'd roll everything back. Everything!
Clinton was a president who used his office, in creative ways, to try to reinvigorate the federal government to benefit the majority.
The nation should be able to remove by an orderly constitutional process any president with an unyielding commitment to failed policies and an inability to renew the country's hope.
Once a president gets to the White House, the only audience that is left that really matters is history.
Surveillance changes history. We know this through examples of corrupt presidents like Nixon.
For style and for creating a mood of optimism and hope - Kennedy on that count is as effective as any president the country has had in its history.
Hollywood has a history of raising expectations beyond Washington's reach, of appealing to the very American desire to mythologize political leaders, particularly the president.