Listen, if the mayor wants to have a debate about education in this city, I got three words: bring it on.
Meaning of the quote
The politician is saying that if the mayor wants to discuss education in the city, the politician is ready and willing to have that debate. The politician is confident and not afraid to have a discussion about this important issue.
About Anthony Weiner
Anthony Weiner was a former U.S. Representative from New York who resigned in 2011 after a sexting scandal. He later ran for mayor of New York City but lost in the primary. In 2017, Weiner pled guilty to transferring obscene material to a minor and served 21 months in prison.
More quotes from Anthony Weiner
New York lost a classic. Carmine was an old school New Yorker.
American politician (born 1964)
What I am saying is, all health care has a problem with costs. Medicare is growing slower than the private insurance plans. Why? Because of their efficiency. They don’t have to give money to shareholders. Why should be defending shareholders?
American politician (born 1964)
I’m not resigning, and I’m going to try very hard to go back to work a better man and a better husband too.
American politician (born 1964)
I’ve exchanged messages and photos of an explicit nature with about six women over the last three years. For the most part, these communications took place before my marriage, though some have sadly took place after. To be clear, I have never met any of these women or had physical relationships at any time.
American politician (born 1964)
I have made terrible mistakes that have hurt the people that I cared about the most, and I am terribly sorry. I am deeply ashamed of my terrible judgment and my actions.
American politician (born 1964)
Sooner or later they are going to live in a New York City where gay marriage is not only legal, but it’s common and they don’t even notice.
American politician (born 1964)
Do you know what the overhead is of the Medicare system? One-point-zero-five percent. Do you know what – private insurance is 30 percent in overhead and profits? Given a choice how I’m going to improve health care, I’m going to take it away from private insurance profits and overhead. Wouldn’t you?
American politician (born 1964)
Is Medicare socialism? You want to get rid of Medicare. And a lot of the people against health care do. I want to preserve it and grow it.
American politician (born 1964)
It’s also very important in Latin America. If we can deal with the drug problem there, some of their strife there, it’s less likely we have immigration problems here.
American politician (born 1964)
Pictures get manipulated, pictures get dropped into accounts. We’ve asked an internet security firm and a law firm to take a hard look at this to come up with a conclusion about what happened and to make sure it doesn’t happen again.
American politician (born 1964)
I am announcing my resignation from Congress so my colleagues can get back to work, my neighbors can choose a new representative and most importantly that my wife and I can continue to heal from the damage I have caused.
American politician (born 1964)
All those predictions about how much economic growth will be created by this, all of those new jobs, would be created by the things we wanted – the extension of unemployment insurance and middle class tax cuts. An estate tax for millionaires adds exactly zero jobs. A tax cut for billionaires – virtually none.
American politician (born 1964)
At a time when the GOP is playing games with the debt limit, a member of the Supreme Court is refusing to recuse himself from matters he has a financial interest in, and middle class incomes are stagnant, many want to change the subject. I don’t. This was a prank, and a silly one. I’m focused on my work.
American politician (born 1964)
For the past few years I have engaged in several inappropriate conversations conducted over Twitter, Facebook, e-mail and occasionally on the phone with women I have met online.
American politician (born 1964)
It’s a nice neighborhood, like the one I left. My home borough is Brooklyn and Queens.
American politician (born 1964)
We’re trying to get to the bottom of where the picture came from, and we’re trying to get to the bottom of what it’s of and who it’s of.
American politician (born 1964)
Every dollar that we send in State Department aid or humanitarian aid that saves us from having to get involved with very expensive military actions is a good investment. And frankly, helping Israel fight terrorism in the Middle East is much cheaper than us fighting it here on our shores.
American politician (born 1964)
Here we have been sitting down for a brief moment and you are already asking me if there are pictures of me in my drawers.
American politician (born 1964)
I am here today to again apologize for the personal mistakes I have made and the embarrassment I have caused. I make this apology to my neighbors and my constituents, but I make it particularly to my wife, Huma.
American politician (born 1964)
There’s no doubt about it, earmarks are not very popular. There are good earmarks and bad earmarks. The good earmarks are the ones I get for my district.
American politician (born 1964)
The picture was of me, and I sent it.
American politician (born 1964)
I was trying to protect my wife, I was trying to protect myself from shame, and I really regret it.
American politician (born 1964)
There’s no doubt about it that Mubarak has been indeed a partner with Israel, but there’s also no doubt about something else. Conditions in Egypt were getting worse and worse, and it was almost just a matter of time before the popular uprising started.
American politician (born 1964)
Listen, if the mayor wants to have a debate about education in this city, I got three words: bring it on.
American politician (born 1964)
For the fifth year in a row, the Bush budget cuts city core services to pay for wealthy tax breaks. And once again, the mayor’s requests were not funded.
American politician (born 1964)
We always make the mistake in the United States of America in Democratic or Republican administrations alike is we tend to embrace the despot that’s least troublesome to us. That should not be the way we view things.
American politician (born 1964)
I see a trend here where the President seems to think his job is to count votes and then try to make a deal That’s what we in legislatures do. Mr. Obama’s job is to travel the country, fight for the values that he cares about.
American politician (born 1964)
Last Friday night, I Twitted a photograph of myself that I intended to send as a direct message as part of a joke to a woman in Seattle. Once I realized I posted to Twitter I panicked, I took it down and said that I had been hacked. I then continued with that story, to stick to that story which was a hugely regrettable mistake.
American politician (born 1964)
More and more Americans are asking about the price that we have to pay when Wal-Mart comes into a community, treats workers poorly, violates immigration laws and squashes small businesses.
American politician (born 1964)