An election is supposed to be about our whole country - we can't just concentrate on those areas where people, for the most part, already agree with us.

As Democrats and progressives look to the future, we should remember our most essential values.

Our neighborhoods are safer when there is trust between communities and the police who are in charge of protecting them.

My surname, Buttigieg (Boot-edge-edge), is very common in my father's country of origin, the tiny island of Malta, and nowhere else.

In 'Palaces for the People,' Eric Klinenberg offers a new perspective on what people and places have to do with each other, by looking at the social side of our physical spaces.

When I was deployed, I could feel a full spectrum of American power keeping me safe. And yes, that was the armor on my vehicle; yes, it was the armor on my body; but it was also the armor of some level of American moral authority.

As a mayor, my instinct is to really think about how to get something done and not to make the promise unless you have some view of the pathway. You don't have to have it all figured out, but you have to have a pathway there.

We've got to find a way to use our identities to reach other people.

The center of gravity of the American people is way to the left of the center of gravity of Congress and, in many ways, to the left of the national Democratic Party.

Physically robust infrastructure is not enough if it fails to foster a healthy community; ultimately, all infrastructure is social.

We need to intentionally invest in health, in home ownership, in entrepreneurship, in access to democracy, in economic empowerment. If we don't do these things, we shouldn't be surprised that racial inequality persists because inequalities compound.

I think there's an opportunity hopefully for religion to be not so much used as a cudgel but invoked as a way of calling us to higher values.

Being gay isn't something you choose, but you do face choices about whether and how to discuss it.

When I think about where most of Scripture points me, it is toward defending the poor, and the immigrant, and the stranger, and the prisoner, and the outcast, and those who are left behind by the way society works.

There's this romantic idea that's built up around war. But the pragmatic view is there are tons of people of my generation who have lost their lives, lost their marriages, or lost their health as a consequence of being sent to wars which could have been avoided.

One of the reasons we set up this country, one of the things we celebrate in freedom and democracy of the United States is you can criticize your president. You can criticize the ways in which the country falls short of its values.

What's worse: a president who is very faithful to an ideology that you find extreme, or a president who is very cynical and appears to have no ideology at all? Neither one of those things is great.

Being the mayor of your hometown is the best job in America, partly because it's relatively nonpartisan - we focus on results, not ideology.

The world is changing, but it is not changing on its own.

You can't understand America without understanding the Puritans. In many ways, we're still living out their legacy in ways that are good and bad.

So much of what Christ's teachings are about have to do with the way that we take care of the least among us.

I think for those of us who think that our morality is something that needs to be in touch with our religious faith personally, then it's really important to explain that no one party has a monopoly on faith.

You're not free if you can't marry the person you love because a county clerk is imposing his or her interpretation of religion on you.

In many ways, Trump appeals to people's smallness, their fears, whatever part of them wants to look backward.

Presidents going live from the Oval Office have used that platform to inform the American public, and also to do one of the most important parts of their job: to inspire the best in us.

We can't look for greatness in the past.

Our right to practice our faith freely is respected up to the point where doing so involves harming others.

I get the urge people will have after Trump. 'Look at the chaos and the exhaustion: Wouldn't it be better to go back to something more stable with somebody we know?' But there's no going back to a pre-Trump universe. We can't be saying the system will be fine again just like it was. Because that's not true; it wasn't fine.

A lot of these so-called left positions are actually centrist by the standards of the American people, just not by members of the American Congress.

You can't just let companies self-regulate, and I've gotta think they get that, too.

I think that policy matters. I'm a policy guy.

Safety and security are the most basic job of government. I understand that - both as a mayor who works every day to secure public safety and reduce crime, and also as someone who deployed in uniform to Afghanistan because I believed joining the military was part of my duty to help keep my country safe.

I hope that teachings about inclusion and love win out over what I personally consider to be a handful of scriptures that reflect the moral expectations of the era in which they were recorded.

Building a wall won't solve our border security challenges.

I think people are just puzzled by why people where I'm from make the political choices sometimes that they do.

So much of politics is about people's relationships with themselves. You do better if you make people feel secure in who they are.

I am a Democrat because I believe in protecting freedom, fairness, families, and the future.

I think of myself as a democratic capitalist, although I think the word 'socialism' loses its meaning every time that it is used to describe literally any policy left of far right by the current Republicans.

I don't know how it plays in San Francisco. But I can tell you I came out, during a reelection campaign, in Indiana, while Mike Pence was the governor. And I wound up winning reelection by 80 percent.

The challenge in confronting Trump is that there are certain things that he does that that you have to respond to, just morally. When he lies, you've got to correct the lie, which will keep you busy because he does it so often. When he does something wrong, you've got to point to it.

I'm proud of who I am. I am proud of my husband and our marriage.

I was well into adulthood before I was prepared to acknowledge the simple fact that I am gay. It took years of struggle and growth for me to recognize that it's just a fact of life, like having brown hair, and part of who I am.

In my generation, thankfully, as somebody who served in the Afghanistan War, would have served in the Iraq War, if called to do so - was also strongly against the Iraq War, from the beginning - I'm so thankful that we live in a moment that we can honor the troops separately from policy.

My marriage to Chasten has made me a better man.

The old line of thought used to be that local government is the bush leagues.

When people are economically or socially dislocated, they are always more vulnerable to being radicalized.

The greatest nation in the world should not have much to fear from a family, especially children, fleeing violence. More importantly, children fleeing violence ought to have nothing to fear from the greatest country in the world.

The background of a mayor of a city of any size is a background of somebody who on one hand is an executive and on the other hand is very close to the ground.

Being attentive to the things that add meaning to our lives alongside politics will help us inform our politics with the values that really do make America great.

The force that has come closest across American history to actually ending America was white supremacy. That was the Civil War.