It's not always easy to come to the national team and be on the bench.

I try to show myself at Liverpool, and when I come to the national team, I try to show myself in training or in games.

Sadio is a world-class player. He has so many qualities. He's a very strong player; he's a very quick player. He's always scoring goals and creating chances for the team.

I am a completely different player to Ballack and Schweinsteiger. I admire the careers they have had - I hope mine will be like theirs - but I am not the same.

I want to go my own way - to build my own career. To be known as Emre Can.

I want to make it very clear that I have nothing at all against Bayern. They gave me lot of good things, a good education, and it was my decision to leave.

I always have a drive to take me forward offensively, regardless of what position I am playing.

I just concentrate on my performance and the football.

Football is like that - sometimes you have good times, sometimes you have bad times.

When you have a new manager, and everything is new, it gives every team a lift.

Any move is a risk. Nothing is guaranteed in football.

For years, Ireland used to have a philosophy of 'Get them in here to invest and develop in Ireland, and this will sort out our problems.' It is good in the sense of building a trade surplus, but we also want to develop what it is that we offer ourselves and that Irish companies export abroad.

COP 21 provides a unique opportunity for the political leaders of this generation to provide lasting foundations for the preservation and sustainability of generations of the future.

Foreign investors like decisiveness; they like clarity. There isn't any confusion about Ireland's corporate tax rate: it is 12.5%. End of story.

I don't take myself too seriously, but I take the job very seriously, and I expect people to do the job that they're given because this is about all our people, young and old, and it's an enormous responsibility.

I'm a big fan of Springsteen. Obviously, his social commentary is very powerful for me. I like his album 'The Rising.' It's not a new one, but it sticks in my mind because of what it says to me.

My experience would say to me, never presume to have an answer to what the people are actually going to do.

My wife, Fionnuala, and I have been married for more than 20 years.

We have so much discrimination in this world - colour, race, creed, all of these things - and there is an issue here that the right of marriage in the civil law is not extended to same-sex couples.

We link our future to the euro, to the euro zone, and to the European Union while being the nearest neighbor of the United Kingdom with, obviously, a common travel area and a very close working relationship with the U.K.

The decision of a majority of people in the United Kingdom to vote to leave the European Union is profoundly disappointing.

Clericalism has rendered some of Ireland's brightest, most privileged and powerful men either unwilling or unable to address the horrors cited in the Ryan and Murphy Reports.

We are going to serve our full term; there will be no snap election, and we are going to do our best to ensure that 2016 is going to be a good economic year.

It is the young people in whom I place my confidence because of their competence, because of their enthusiasm, because of their capacity to meet the frontiers that are changing every week.

Our revenue commissions are very happy and very clear that they showed no sweetheart deals and no preference for any company and never do and never have and never will.

I am perfectly clear in my mind and in my conscience in respect of freedom of religious principles and beliefs.

My relationship with Alan Shatter is a professional relationship: obviously worked with him over the years, complimented him for his work as a reforming minister, and move on.

I get on very well with Denis Naughten, absolutely.

Our common membership of the E.U. provided an important external context to the Irish and U.K. governments working together for peace. It should not be discounted lightly.

For me, it is all about people having jobs, and that is why I make no apology for having focused relentlessly on employment and job creation.

We have spent our time in government fixing the economy.

Conservation is important... water comes at a cost.

The re-establishment of a hard border on the island of Ireland would be a step backwards and present an opportunity for others, with malign agendas, to exploit for destructive purposes.

Building on our strong track record of supporting developing countries, including in areas like climate justice, human rights, gender and education, Ireland recognises that vulnerable communities need very considerable assistance in adapting to climate change.

If people want to follow an illusion that you don't have to pay your way, you don't have to measure up, then there are serious consequences for any country.

The Constitution says that the right to life of the unborn is protected and given equal rights as the life of the mother.

Respectability in this country was a bad word because people did things who were in respected professions that let down the entire nation, and we're washing away their sins yet.

I have never had an interest in opinion polls. They are merely an indicator, that's all.

No politician in a European sense is happy with 26 million people unemployed. Nobody can be happy with 6 to 9 million young people unemployed. You have to give them hope and confidence and a sense of inspiration that the European process is actually about people, not about bureaucracy.

One of the key drivers of Ireland's future is our balance of trade surplus.

You see, in government, people give you a mandate, and you've got to fulfil that. Ours is very clear. Fix our public finances and get our country working.

Irish people are pragmatic. They understand that nobody is going to fix our problems but ourselves.

The best recording is the one you bring with you in your mind.

My job is to rectify the public finances and hand the country back to the people so they can really have a future, and that is what I will do.

Emigration is always a difficulty.

You have a responsibility as a locally elected deputy, but you also have a responsibility as the head of government.

You're not going to be able to deliver jobs locally unless you sort out the nation's problems, and that's why the big and difficult decisions about Ireland's economy have been so crucial and so difficult for people to have to accept and have to deal with, but the reality is the people gave this government an unprecedented mandate.

We have a very long legal system with the European Union, and we're English speaking.

Ireland cannot become the collector general for the world. We can only tax on profits generated in the country here.

The world has changed utterly. There was a time when you couldn't marry a Protestant. There was a time when you got married that the women had to give up their job in the public service, and when they got married, they were owned by their husbands. That's all changed.