It often takes time for the Israeli government to get things done.

Netanyahu supports - and he truly does support - building a Palestinian state within Israel.

I state in no uncertain terms: An order to uproot an Arab village or a Jewish settlement violates the most basic of human rights... It's a difficult dilemma.

There will not be a billion-shekel cut to education on my watch.

The State of Israel must be at the forefront of global science - in physics, in mathematics, in medicine, in biology.

Any deal that allows Iran to enrich uranium, which allows them to ultimately break out within a few months with a nuclear weapon, is a disaster for the world.

Can you imagine what will happen to the global economy if Iran comes out with a nuclear weapon? The whole area will enter a nuclear race - Saudi Arabia, Turkey.

What I'm working is for peace on ground between Israelis and Palestinians through business, through economy, through quality of life.

There's 2 million Palestinians that govern themselves. They have their own parliament, their own government, their own elections, their own tax system. I don't want to govern the Palestinians; no one does. They already govern themselves.

Not everything can be solved quickly.

We need to do everything possible to save the Jewish state. We don't have another Jewish state.

If you want to conduct terror against Israelis, which is unacceptable, send fighters to do it. Don't send your women and children.

I myself am a former commando fighter.

Israel never targets civilians deliberately, period.

The Land of Israel goes with the Torah of Israel under the sovereignty of the State of Israel.

We must continue building in all corners of the Land of Israel, with determination and without being confused.

You cannot force a state to be demilitarized. Even if a state enters a treaty where it commits to be demilitarized, there's no way to reverse statehood if it violates it.

The term 'demilitarized Palestinian state' is an oxymoron.

In the Middle East, we don't have the luxury to indulge in fantasy.

I'm not going to tell the Palestinians how to arrange themselves. If they want to have their own entity and their own parliament as they do today, that's fine. If they want to connect to Jordan, which has a very big Palestinian population, and vote in the Jordanian government, that's fine.

You don't talk to terror organizations!

I don't believe in regime change, certainly not in the Middle East.

The biggest danger for any organism is to not identify that it's being threatened. I want to hope that people realize that the source of danger and risk in the Middle East is not the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but the deep radical Islamic vision of forming a global caliphate.

I am often in contact with the hareidi public and politicians.

I very much admire Uri Ariel. I think he's a man of principles, and effective, and I love him.

There's been a significant amount of Israelis who are joining my party because they think that Israel has to have a tough stance in this crazy environment called the Middle East.

Israel will not divide its land. We're already too small.

I have not one shred of anger in my heart against Netanyahu or his wife.

It's totally viable to envisage a million Jews living in Judea and Samaria.

Jews can build in New York, Moscow and Paris, but in our own land, we can't build? That's nuts.

I don't see any difference between Judea and Samaria and the rest of the country.

Judea and Samaria can be a place of refuge for the nation.

Let's be honest: discrimination against Arabs exists in Israel.

We know that 99.9% of Arab-Israelis are loyal to Israel.

Netanyahu's raison d'etre is to save Israel from Iran. That is it. That is his mission in the most profound sense. I have seen it up close.

Israel is not the safest place in the world for Jews. Melbourne in Australia is better. Teaneck, New Jersey, is safer.

Israel, contrary to most of the West, has a high fertility rate, so there's a lot of young people in Israel. Most families have three kids as opposed to one or two, so a big proportion of the population is under 30.

Things are expensive, very expensive in Israel for many reasons. One of the reasons is our ports. It's a monopoly. They run very poorly. And we have ships that are stuck in the ocean for three or four days or a week, and all that cost is transferred to the products and the consumer.

I want the world to understand that a Palestinian state means no Israeli state. That's the equation.

No country in the world is going to recognize that Ariel and Maaleh Adumim and Beit El are a sovereign part of Israel.

It's no secret that I wear a kippa.

Haredi youth are smart, and they are going to bring a big benefit to the high-tech industry.

Israel now has a reputation around the world of being not just a place to develop products and technology but to develop ideas.

Historically, the National Religious Party, which my party - Jewish Home - is built upon, has aligned itself in consecutive Israeli governments with the ultra-Orthodox factions.

The Israeli government has already established a fund to encourage young Arab women, specifically from the Bedouin community, to study engineering. We are funding their university studies and providing them with mentors who assist them with their studies and the job placement process.

The Israeli public is frustrated with the way it is portrayed abroad.

If you want to change things, it requires bravery.

I opened about a dozen employment centers for Arab women across Israel during my two years as minister of economy.

You can't build a society without law.

I myself have felt the wrath of the media, but that's part of what a good democracy is.