Never look back' is my philosophy.

I'm not into power for the sake of it.

I have no beliefs of a religious kind.

Health and education are always issues.

People are optimistic about the future.

Never look back. Move on. Aim high. Etc.

Business can talk itself into a blue funk.

I only take on roles that I'm passionate about.

Well of course New Zealand isn't anti-American.

Of course I have an opinion on many things but I don't micromanage.

Economic growth which strips out the planet’s ecosystems is not sustainable

Girls can do anything. We do do anything and we expect to be treated as equals.

Any serious shift towards more sustainable societies has to include gender equality.

No country will reach its full potential if its female citizens do not enjoy full equality.

Well in the end the world can crank itself up to sanctions, as it has with Zimbabwe, another sad case.

We need innovation. We need great ideas that can be simply and effectively produced all over the place.

I deeply detest social distinction and snobbery, and in that lies my strong aversion to titular honours.

Someone's got to break the glass ceiling, and once it's broken, everybody else comes clamouring up behind.

I only take on roles that I'm passionate about. Life is too short to do things that you're not happy with.

Equity, dignity, happiness, sustainability - these are all fundamental to our lives but absent in the GDP.

I think that generally New Zealand is respected for the positions it takes because it thinks them through.

We're a nation in search of an identity, but it's quite exciting. I don't regard it as a problem. It's a challenge.

Marine protected areas, and particularly no-take zones, are very effective in allowing regeneration of fish stocks.

I think the penny has dropped that the All Blacks aren't automatically just going to be the best team in the world.

I think the issue of North Korea is one where the international community as a whole has to work to resolve the crisis.

If ordinary means I have suddenly got to produce a household of kids and iron Peter's shirts, I'm sorry, I'm not interested.

Afghanistan is one of the poorest countries on earth. Security issue or no security issue, there would need to be a focus on it.

New Zealand and SA should take this dimension into account, the skills South Africans are presently contributing to New Zealand.

In terms of having views and being prepared to express them, yes, I think New Zealand's had a leadership role in a lot of things.

We just sent our condolences to the President of the United States and the American people on what is a terrible, terrible tragedy.

I don't know that you're ever going to persuade New Zealanders that they're not going to own their own homes and I'm not going to try.

New Zealand's been pretty quiet on human rights issues, which we will be taking rather more interest in, and in international labor issues.

Of course as a small country you're not necessarily in the strongest negotiating position unless you're negotiating with other small countries.

In the end, there will always be a fundamental difference of perspective between New Zealand and Australia on defense, whoever is in government.

It's fair to say that, for much of my lifetime, New Zealand certainly was a property-owning democracy and working people, ordinary people, had assets.

If the market is left to sort matters out, social injustice will be heightened and suffering in the community will grow with the neglect the market fosters.

Fortunately New Zealand doesn't have land borders so we are able to be somewhat more rigorous on who gets in and out of our country than perhaps some people.

Well, there have been periods in the past when prime ministers of Australia and New Zealand were at each others' throats publicly and frequently. That's not productive at all.

In terms of protecting ourselves, the main issues are around how do we protect our borders [from illegal migrants and livestock and plant diseases], how do we protect our fisheries?

As New Zealanders, we've been in on the United Nations from the very beginning, played a role in the drafting of the charter - it means a lot to us that those processes are followed.

We need a lot of thinking and ideas. We need all the innovators, particularly with the new sustainable technologies - how do we get them to affordability so that people can generate clean energy?

Innovation applied across the board of development is having a huge impact, and can have more. All sorts of technology can provide shortcuts, can overcome obstacles which once seemed insuperable.

I think it's inevitable that New Zealand will become a republic and that would reflect the reality that New Zealand is a totally sovereign-independent 21st century nation 12,000 miles from the United Kingdom.

There is also a marked global trend towards sustainable agriculture, building on traditional methods which use fewer chemical inputs, carefully manage soil and water resources, and work hand-in-hand with nature.

I felt really compromised. I think legal marriage is unnecessary and I would not have formalised the relationship [with husband Peter Davis] except for going into Parliament. I have always railed against it privately.

It is a very small minority point of view and I think, through continuing to set the tone of tolerance, acceptance, and diversity, you just have to further marginalize such people. Hopefully one day nobody will think that way.

Grounded in international human rights, gender equality doesn’t just improve the lives of individual women, girls, and their families; it makes economic sense, strengthens democracy, and enables long-term sustainable progress.

The Prime Minister is head of team but its not a one woman act. I've been called all those things. Intellectual, sharp-tongued, all true. But what New Zealander is like is to know that someone is in charge and in the end the buck stops with the Prime Minister.

Although biodiversity loss continues globally, many countries are significantly slowing the rate of loss by shoring up protected natural areas and the services they provide, and in expanding national park systems with tighter management and more secure funding.

Adopting and promoting sustainable production practices require concerted effort, something which in practice is too often missing or insufficient. Making this shift at the scale required demands forward-looking leadership in the public and private sectors alike.

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