Anytime I meet people who got to make the deliberate choice, whose parents chose Canada, I'm jealous. Because I think being able to choose it, rather than being Canadian by default, is an amazing statement of attachment to Canada.

My father found cocktail parties challenging.

One of the fundamental responsibilities of any Canadian prime minister is to get our resources to market.

Some people have come to admire Stephen Harper's style because he's standing at the top of the pyramid - that's not leadership to me.

I think people understand that if you're going to have a successful economy, you need people's potential to be realized. That means education. It means university education, sure, but it also means training, apprenticeships and various kinds of skills diplomas that we know are necessary.

Liberals will continue to put forward positive solutions that will help our economy grow and give all Canadians a real and fair chance at success.

For me, I've always been Justin Trudeau, son of. All my life I've had to know I was carrying a name, and people were paying more attention to what I had to say, and I had to make a choice early on.

I'm not going to reduce the choices of Canadians at the ballot box by backroom deals or secret arrangements. I think that's a cause for cynicism more than anything else.

This is the kind of balance people expect: both environment and the economy - not one or the other.

Canada was built around a very simple premise. A promise that you can work hard and succeed and build a future for yourselves and your kids, and that future for your kids would be better than the one you had.

I don't feel that I or Canada has to prove anything through big, loud, overt acts.

People are very much worried that our kids are not going to inherit the same opportunities that we inherited from our parents.

Politicians are constantly stuck between what is politically expedient and politically beneficial and what is the responsible or right thing to do. It's a tension we all go through.

People have to know that when you sign a deal with Canada, a change in governments won't immediately scrap the jobs and benefits coming from it.

Income splitting is not a wise investment for Canadians.

I was a high-school teacher. I am a strong advocate for women's rights, and I'm not a woman.

People in the street will either call me 'Prime Minister' or 'Justin.' We'll see how that goes. But when I'm working, when I'm with my staff in public, I'm 'Prime Minister.' I say that if we're drinking beer out of a bottle, and you can see my tattoos, you should be comfortable calling me 'Justin.'

I have no regrets.

Certainly in a world where terrorism is a daily reality in the news, it's easy for people to be afraid. But the fact is that we laid out very clearly - and Canadians get - that it's actually not a choice between either immigration or security: that of course they go together.

I sort of locked into the idea that if I could be the perfect son to both of my parents, well maybe that would be enough to keep them together. And ultimately, obviously, it wasn't. Regardless of what I tried to do. That was a lesson about limitations.

It's always easy to look at either the politics of division or fear as effective tools in politics, but ultimately, even though they can be effective tools to help you get elected, they hinder your ability to actually get the job of building a better future for this country, for this community, done.

Canadians want to elect good people to be their voice in Ottawa.

If a middle-class family in Shanghai or Guangzhou is looking for a good-quality product, we want them to look at a maple leaf and say, 'OK, it's good quality.'

We're asking those who have done well to do a little more for the people who need it.

Canadians need a plan for jobs and growth.

I think we're pretty much where we need to be on corporate taxes.

From the very beginning, I've talked about how we're going to strengthen the middle class in this country.

We are going to remain an important part of the coalition against ISIL.

My job is to do the best possible job for my country, and I wouldn't want someone else telling me what I should be doing in Canada.

Canadians are tired of being cynical.

I have spent an awful lot of time listening to Canadians, learning from them, working with them.

The Liberal Party will not vote - no Liberal member of Parliament will vote - to take away a woman's right to choose.

Vancouver is home. I spent a huge amount of time here as a kid growing up with my mom, with my grandparents who lived here.

If Rob Ford decided he wanted to run for the Liberal Party in 2015, we'd say, 'No, sorry, the way you approach things, the way you govern, the way you behave is not suitable to the kind of Liberal team we want to build.'

Life is too short to be scared and not take risks. I'd rather be the person that's like, 'I messed up,' than, 'I wish I did that.'

I like to mix the street look with classy and sexy. I call it 'hood chic.'

Everyone has their own style. It's unique; no one person's style is wrong.

I'm confident in who I am, and I'm not doing anything wrong. I'm just being myself: being comfortable with my body, comfortable with my sound, and I'm figuring out who I am.

I love to glow, and it's important for me to have a good highlighter to brighten up.

Even at my lowest point, when I've wanted to give up, I know that I have to believe in myself because I'm all that I have.

I love jerk chicken. I could literally eat it every single day of my life. I also like curry goat, rice and peas, and ackee and saltfish. For some reason, no one ever taught me how to cook, though. They've always cooked for me!

I'm not just a pretty face. I want to pursue something.

No one can predict the future, but what I do know is that myself and my team work hard every day to make sure that my vision, my sound, and my brand reach their full potential.

I believe I'm a unicorn. Unicorns are very magical and powerful and strong.

My hair color is super important to my look because I feel like it helps kind of define who I am. It's like a characteristic of mine that makes me feel comfortable and different from the rest.

I definitely look up to Rihanna. She doesn't care what anyone thinks of her, and she's not afraid of taking risks and trying different things, whether it's fashion or music. She's all about what makes her comfortable.

To me, being a black woman and being beautiful are not mutually exclusive.

My family is from Flatbush, but I grew up in Fort Greene-Clinton Hill area.

A lot of people love to throw the social climber thing at people who are on the rise, but it's really just God moving all the people that are distractions, all the obstacles, out of the way for me to achieve what I'm destined to achieve.

For the most part, my daily attire is comfortable yet fashionable - I guess you can call it tomboyish.