No sane person would run for president, right?

Aggressive government spending during the Great Recession was absolutely necessary.

There's no question we need more housing, and we have to fight for that throughout California.

Mayors are really good at dealing with things practically.

I'm a typical mutt American. I have an Italian last name. Half-Mexican, half-Jewish.

I've worked closely with presidents, especially with President Obama, and I realized that what good leaders do at the national level is no different than what we do at the local level.

I'm in what feels like a pretty transparent fishbowl as mayor. People see you at the market, people see you at the diner, people see you wherever you are, talk to you. You don't shave, they're taking selfies of you. You come back from your jog, they're talking to you.

I prioritize my daughter and my wife.

The fact is, there are far more customers for American products outside of the U.S. than there are here at home. With open markets and a level playing field, American workers can out-compete workers anywhere in the world.

As mayor, I've traveled to China, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, and Mexico to meet with heads of state and business leaders to promote trade with L.A. companies and through L.A.'s seaports and airports - because that generates L.A. jobs.

We need a pro-worker trade approach that puts American jobs - not corporate profits - front and center.

Environment, homelessness, infrastructure and immigration - I'm very focused on all four, which are critical to the success of Los Angeles.

In presidential elections, I think people focus way too much on ideology.

Cory Booker I've known since 1993. We used to be part of the L'Chaim Society at Oxford University together.

Pete Buttigieg is one of my closest friends as a mayor.

I am a passionate, committed composer, and the guy I used to write musicals with, once he was able to ditch me and get a better composer, actually won the Tony.

People will give you the responsibility, even the authority, to go after the big things, the visionary things, the reaching for incredible opportunities, if they trust that you're running a city well. And if you don't run a city well, conversely, you can't do the big things.

I don't want to bring a European city or an east-coast city to the West Coast.

The cost of housing in L.A. has increased dramatically because more people want to live here. They come to Los Angeles every day, not just from around the United States but from around the world.

I don't spend much time on the computer at all, so I do most of my email on my phone if I do any at all.

Don't run for mayor if you don't want to basically be working all the time.

I think, for me, the biggest issue is poverty in general, poverty in this time of plenty. It's reflected in homelessness. It's reflected in educational gaps. It's reflected in racial disparities.

I think connected to poverty is the trauma of poverty. It's not just a material thing; it's a psychological thing that we have no mental health system in this country.

The classic rules of American politics are dying, if not dead, if you look at the last two presidential elections. An African-American could never be president until one was; a TV reality star couldn't become president until one was.

I'm progressive, and I'm practical.

I've always said we need to build resilience locally.

It sure would be nice to have a Washington that was there for us, but most help has always been local and regional.

Mayors are accountable. Local governments are accountable.

Most people will be primarily getting into autonomous vehicles if we look 20, 30 years out. If we mandate that autonomous vehicles have to be electric, then we will move people into electric vehicles.

You have to listen to your own heart.

I'm the grandson of immigrants who came across rivers and oceans to get here, some without documentation.

I'm very much a California boy. I try to eat healthy and exercise.

The Olympics have been an amazing part of Los Angeles' history. In many ways in 1932, they put us on the map when people didn't even know where Los Angeles was. In 1984, they were the first profitable Olympics of the modern era.

There are two Americas: Washington and the rest of us.

The travel that I've spent around the country, I always come back with ideas for L.A. and vice versa: My experiences in L.A. give me an immediacy to issues that sometimes people in Washington think about but aren't experiencing every day.

In Washington, you have imaginary problems, and they can't even solve the imaginary problems.

I think everyone has the impression that L.A. is Hollywood and fast lives. That couldn't be further from the truth.

Ninety-five percent of my work is being mayor. But that 5% that nags at all of us - of what's going wrong in this country - I think is best thought out not in your own head but by getting out there, being out there, and listening to Americans.

I lived in Burma for a couple of summers in the '90s, working with the democratic resistance that had fled to the jungles.

I have an incredible compass. You can put me back in a country I haven't been in 20 years and say, 'Get me from point A to point B,' and I'll take you there.

L.A. is a great city to get lost in. The best thing to do is to drive in any direction, find a strip mall, and go from one store to the next. I guarantee you will see a collision of cultures you never imagined.

I'm pretty skinny, and I can sleep at the drop of a hat. So, take that middle seat in economy and save the money for other things you can do.

My wife and I are foster parents.

Cities are those laboratories of democracy that states used to be.

Tax cuts that actually go to working-class, middle-class people, I'm not opposed to.

Los Angeles has all the ingredients of success... but we need to start with our education system.

The struggle of African Americans is everybody's struggle.

I'd hate to see new housing building accelerating while taking down buildings where there's 50 people living in rent-stabilized apartments.

I always thought Grover Cleveland was from Cleveland.

Mayors in any city are pretty non-partisan people where it's problem solvers.