Every budget I have ever prepared has been balanced.

Well, I mean, I'm very much a pragmatic person.

Most people wouldn't want to marry a politician.

The civil service are risk averse.

You lose power in Britain and you are just Joe Public again.

Psephology isn't a hate crime.

The people I really most admire are Robert Kennedy and Franklin Roosevelt. If you know someone, it is very hard to revere them.

I'm in exactly the same position as everybody else who has a small business.

I was a weedy kid, not like one of those working-class men who can accommodate not being academically clever by physical strength and prowess.

I would like to sound like James Mason. I reckon if I'd had a better voice I could have been prime minister. It is the most irritating voice in public life.

Thatcher was prepared to destroy the world rather than give in on something she believed in.

Anybody who enjoys being in the House of Commons probably needs psychiatric help.

World wide capitalism kills more people everyday then Hitler did. And he was crazy.

I Kenneth Robert Livingstone, having been elected to the office of mayor of London, declare that I take that office upon myself, and will duly and faithfully fulfil the duties of it to the best of my judgement and ability.

I undertake that, in the exercise of my functions of that office I will have regard to any guidance with respect to ethical standards issued by the secretary of state under Section 66 of the Greater London Authority Act 1999.

My administration will tackle these issues in consultation with the black communities of London.

There needs to be radical development in equality law to create the environment to allow women to stay in work.

I grew up in Lambeth, I went to normal schools and I've grown up in a city where people say what they think.

All the politics of the post-war period was about the clash between the Soviet Union and America, and virtually all issues ended up being subordinated to that. Now, the question is, what is the most a socialist can achieve in a global economy?

What do we do about climate change bearing down upon us?

The market is a brilliant system for the exchange of goods and services, but it doesn't protect the environment unless it's regulated, it doesn't train your workforce unless it's regulated, and it doesn't give you the long-term investment you want.

I loathe and detest all this trivialisation of politics.

I liked it when we had ugly politicians who droned on about issues.

When I was leader of the GLC, by the time I had been in control for three years, the difference in pay between the cleaner and the director general was a four-to-one ratio. I find that attractive.

I became a councillor back in 1971, so if by this stage in politics I'm making lots of big mistakes, then I shouldn't be here.

I can only admire people who I have never met and are dead - because you know so much about anyone who is alive.

I don't work hard enough. If I had worked harder I might have been prime minister.

I mean I get loads of money, all from different sources. You give it to your accountant. They manage it. But you pay corporation tax. If you're then taking it out and spending it on yourself, you have to pay more.

I've got people handling the media. I employ at the moment two people. No-one is paying income tax on the money they use to employ people.

I employed my wife for three years to sit in the attic and type up my autobiography, 700 pages, organise everywhere I go. I'm paying the normal rate of tax on the money I take out for myself.

Yes, there are lots of individual exceptions. But no one has ever done a study about voting intention without ascertaining that the biggest determining factor is your income and your wealth.

If I was courting the Muslim vote, I wouldn't have put establishing the partnership ceremony at the forefront of my first term, would I? I go all around London advocating lesbian and gay rights.

I refuse not to have a sense of humour.

I've always told the truth. I've often been wrong - but I've never knowingly lied. Not in public life. Because I don't see the need to.

I think I have gone through my entire public career never telling a lie. I have made mistakes but I never knowingly lied.

I can easily lose myself emotionally in absolute Hollywood garbage.

I go all around London advocating lesbian and gay rights.

I came into politics because I wished to change things. You can't do that by lying to people; you have to educate, and persuade, and carry them with you - and it's often a long haul.

Polling in a general election is pretty accurate, because turnout is usually high.

The whole culture of my background was deeply Conservative.

Well, I get on with people who believe in something.

I've never declined to do an interview.

There isn't much about my life that's been particularly conventional.

Most politicians aren't allowed to express themselves any more.

I can't understand why anyone would want to live the life of a politician if you can't say pretty much what you think. You are not in it for the money: there's unremitting pressure on your life, you give up so much of your privacy. It can only be because of the things you want to do and the things you want to say.

The truth is, no one pays more tax than they have to.

Most people are not shocked that I am occasionally rude to journalists. They are probably amazed I don't punch one in the face.

This life is messy.

When I'm sifting the compost seed or pruning, I argue over issues in my head; I talk to myself.

I actually think the civil service, who are the malignancy at the heart of public life, have consciously prevented, talked ministers out of, made it difficult regulatory-wise, to allow more pressure on alternative energy sources to grow.