As a rule, whenever I hear about a demographic threat, it comes first of all from a type of thinking that says the Arabs are a threat. And this leads to thinking of transfer or that they should be killed. I am appalled by this kind of talk.
I want to thank the American people - on both sides of the aisle - for years of financial, diplomatic, and military support, and for helping us carry the burden of defense.
There are no short cuts, no detours in the Middle East.
We are one family, and the connection between all Jews, all over the world, is very important to the State of Israel.
We must immediately find the way to come and say to the U.S., 'Despite the difficult differences of opinion between us, there are no closer friends, and no better allies than you to us, and we to you.'
I see myself as a former politician, and in that capacity, I say to other politicians, 'Hold back.'
When we come to the hospital to give birth, we don't come as a Jew or an Arab; we come as a human being.
I don't see any possibility of peace if there won't be open borders between us and our neighbors.
The burden is on the Jewish majority in Israel to prove that the definition of their country as Jewish and democratic is not a contradiction.
The politicization of the presidency would pose a real threat to the institution and its function.
The reality is that we only have one person whom the public sees as appropriate to be prime minister, and that's a shame. I think that if there were more, it would be better for everyone, including Netanyahu.
The president is the face of the State of Israel around the world: not a representative of a specific ideology but of the collective creativity and history of the Jewish people.
I'm a utopianist.
Netanyahu must mend fences with Obama.
Germany remains among the few countries in Europe to acknowledge, officially and nationally, its responsibility for the crimes it led against our people.
I won't allow any party to evade the question of which leader they support for prime minister.