Politics isn’t about big money or power games; it’s about the improvement of people’s lives.
Meaning of the quote
Politics is not just about making a lot of money or trying to gain power over others. Instead, it's about finding ways to make people's lives better. Politicians should focus on solving problems and improving things for everyone, not just for themselves or their rich friends.
About Paul Wellstone
Paul Wellstone was a US senator from Minnesota who was known for his progressive politics and grassroots campaigning style. He unexpectedly died in a plane crash just weeks before his reelection bid in 2002, leaving a lasting legacy in Minnesota and beyond.
More quotes from Paul Wellstone
I saw as a teacher how, if you take that spark of learning that those children have, and you ignite it, you can take a child from any background to a lifetime of creativity and accomplishment.
American politician (1944-2002)
When too many Americans don’t vote or participate, some see apathy and despair. I see disappointment and even outrage. And I believe that out of this frustration can come hope and action.
American politician (1944-2002)
Politics isn’t about big money or power games; it’s about the improvement of people’s lives.
American politician (1944-2002)
The idea of democracy has been stripped of it moral imperatives and come to denote hollowness and hypocrisy.
American politician (1944-2002)
I represent the Democratic wing of the Democratic party.
American politician (1944-2002)
Never separate the life you live from the words you speak.
American politician (1944-2002)
The kind of national goal we ought to be thinking about is way beyond national product – it is how do we as a nation help our children be the best kinds of people they could possibly be?
American politician (1944-2002)
Politics is not about money.
American politician (1944-2002)
The American polity is infected with a serious imbalance of power between elites and masses, a power which is the principal threat to our democracy.
American politician (1944-2002)
The future will belong to those who have passion and are willing to work hard to make our country better.
American politician (1944-2002)
Successful organizing is based on the recognition that people get organized because they, too, have a vision.
American politician (1944-2002)
Above and beyond the question of how to grow the economy there is a legitimate concern about how to grow the quality of our lives.
American politician (1944-2002)
What the poor, the weak, and the inarticulate desperately require is power, organization, and a sense of identity and purpose, not rarefied advice of political scientists.
American politician (1944-2002)
I think the future also will not belong to those who are cynical or those who stand on the sidelines.
American politician (1944-2002)
The first task in teaching is to bring to consciousness what the students already believe by virtue of their personal experiences about themselves and society.
American politician (1944-2002)
Our politics are our deepest form of expression: they mirror our past experiences and reflect our dreams and aspirations for the future.
American politician (1944-2002)
Politics is not about winning for the sake of winning.
American politician (1944-2002)
Education and democracy have the same goal: the fullest possible development of human capabilities.
American politician (1944-2002)
Sometimes, the only realists are the dreamers.
American politician (1944-2002)
We can and must move U.S. politics forward by means of committed participation.
American politician (1944-2002)
There are three critical ingredients to democratic renewal and progressive change in America: good public policy, grassroots organizing and electoral politics.
American politician (1944-2002)
The people of this country, not special interest big money, should be the source of all political power.
American politician (1944-2002)
Our aims in political activism are not, and should not be, to create a perfect utopia.
American politician (1944-2002)
It is the belief that extremes and excesses of inequality must be reduced so that each person is free to fully develop his or her full potential. This is why we take precious time out of our lives and give it to politics.
American politician (1944-2002)
I was talking about no nukes, the farm crisis. People said that wasn’t stuff that a state auditor was supposed to be talking about. Maybe they were right.
American politician (1944-2002)
If a teacher does not involve himself, his values, his commitments, in the course of discussion, why should the students?
American politician (1944-2002)
As free citizens in a political democracy, we have a responsibility to be interested and involved in the affairs of the human community, be it at the local or the global level.
American politician (1944-2002)
Why don’t we call on the credit card companies to be accountable? They need to be held accountable for their predatory lending practices.
American politician (1944-2002)
Politics is about the improvement of people’s lives. It’s about advancing the cause of peace and justice in our country and the world. Politics is about doing well for the people.
American politician (1944-2002)
We can remake the world daily.
American politician (1944-2002)
What makes community organizing especially attractive is the faith it places in the ability of the poor to make decisions for themselves.
American politician (1944-2002)
The only way to change is to vote. People are responsible.
American politician (1944-2002)
I don’t think politics has anything to do with left, right, or center. It has to do with trying to do right by people.
American politician (1944-2002)
Politics is not about power.
American politician (1944-2002)
If we don’t fight hard enough for the things we stand for, at some point we have to recognize that we don’t really stand for them.
American politician (1944-2002)
A politics that is not sensitive to the concerns and circumstances of people’s lives, a politics that does not speak to and include people, is an intellectually arrogant politics that deserves to fail.
American politician (1944-2002)
Politics is not predictions and politics is not observations. Politics is what we do. Politics is what we do, politics is what we create, by what we work for, by what we hope for and what we dare to imagine.
American politician (1944-2002)
Without trying, I’m different.
American politician (1944-2002)
I’m short, I’m Jewish and I’m a liberal.
American politician (1944-2002)
There is a major ingredient missing from our perception of how changes are brought about; that ingredient is power.
American politician (1944-2002)
I emphasize self-esteem, self-confidence, and dignity, not as an ideal, but as a real test of community organization. Without leadership development, community organizations do not have staying power.
American politician (1944-2002)