But me ? I'm going up that hill and I hope you are, too.
Campaigns are so much more expensive than people think they are. Just to keep the lights on is several thousand dollars a month.
Capitalism has not always existed in the world and will not always exist in the world.
Change takes courage.
Congress is too old. They don't have a stake in the game.
Democrats are a big-tent party. You know, I'm not trying to impose an ideology on all, you know, several hundred members of Congress.
Democrats should be getting high-fives from sanitation truck drivers - that is what should be happening in America.
I don't like having people do little things for me.
I don't think any person in America should die because they are too poor to live.
I don't think most of Congress understands how economics works.
I know what it's like to access the privilege of a ZIP Code but also be born in one that could have destined me to something else.
I started my campaign out of a Trader Joe's bag with a bunch of printed palm cards and an idea.
I think it's far too early to make those kinds of commitments right now.
I understand the pain of working-class Americans because I have experienced the pain.
I wake up every day, and I'm a Puerto Rican girl from the Bronx. Every single day.
We have a political culture of intimidation, of favoring, of patronage, and of fear, and that is no way for a community to be governed.
We are fighting for an unapologetic movement for economic, social, and racial justice in the United States.
I wasn't born to a wealthy or powerful family - mother from Puerto Rico, dad from the South Bronx.
I was born in a place where your ZIP code determines your destiny.
We have to have a diversity of age represented in Congress, too.
Rather than think of it as somewhere to run from, the Bronx is somewhere to invest.
I'm an educator. I'm an organizer.
Working-class Americans want a clear champion, and there is nothing radical about moral clarity in 2018.