Quotes Library

June 24, 2025

A politician was a person with whose politics you did not agree. When you did agree, he was a statesman.

David Lloyd George (1863–1945), British Liberal politician, prime minister, 1916–1922, speech at Central Hall, Westminster, 2 July 1935, Jay p.230

Is this true, or just a clever-sounding, pre-emptive argument in defense of his own reputation long-term, given the legion of those other politicians who thought him a scoundrel and a blackguard?

Witty, yes; but how does one define a genuine statesman. If we agree that a statesman or stateswoman is one who manages a problem, a situation or a set of situations that threaten the body politic, and sees it through to a more or less successful resolution, then Lloyd George would make at least the first cut, along with others—France’s De Gaulle, Franklin Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln in the U.S., Churchill in the U.K., Mackenzie King or Pierre Trudeau in Canada.


More Quotes

March 9, 2025
Make no laws whatever concerning speech, and speech will be free; so soon as you make a declaration on paper that speech shall be free
March 31, 2025
We often forgive those who bore us, but we cannot forgive those whom we bore.
May 28, 2025
A friend in power is a friend lost.
Page 39 of 63