Words matter. These are the best City Hall Quotes from famous people such as Laura Miller, Annie Lowrey, Park Won-soon, Kevin Faulconer, Sadiq Khan, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
There’s still is a status-quo group at City Hall who likes things done the old way, behind closed doors.
Long before 2020, many Americans were in the position of patching their own safety net and acting as their own city hall.
Most of the job on DDP was already done by the time I became mayor. So was Gwanghwamun Square, described by many architects as the city’s worst architectural creation, and the new city hall. I did not think that redoing them would be the right approach as that would only create new problems.
We must continue to fundamentally change how City Hall invests in neighborhoods by prioritizing areas where the need is greatest.
I am deeply humbled by the hope and trust that Londoners have placed in me. I grew up on a council estate just a few miles from City Hall, and I never imagined that Londoners would one day elect someone like me to lead our great capital city.
When I was growing up, Belfast City Hall was surrounded by security, and we had no access to it. But now, people come in and out of it all the time. On a nice day, office workers and students sit on the lawn outside and have lunch. It’s great to see how Northern Ireland has changed. To be part of that is fantastic.
It’s wasteful spending like this that not only forces tax increases and cuts in vital services… but also really make you wonder: who is City Hall looking out for?
You may name a bronze statue ‘Liberty,’ or a painted figure in a city hall ‘Commerce,’ or a marble form in a temple ‘Athene’ or ‘Venus;’ but what is really there is only a representation of a single woman.
People have said I can come off a little trial-lawyerish. I tell people I never actually became a lawyer, but I play one at City Hall.
In city hall and in local government, you have to get things done without drama.
I will never, ever, ever change one thing I did with my policies at city hall.
I do like the nonpartisan atmosphere here at City Hall where you can talk with the person who opposes you and either get their support or not.
The subject of criminal rehabilitation was debated recently in City Hall. It’s an appropriate place for this kind of discussion because the city has always employed so many ex-cons and future cons.
In many ways, our campaign this year will be the same as last time: We’re still going to focus on fixing up basics and cleaning up ethics at City Hall.
I think our communication strategy has been very disciplined as being a back-to-basics mayor and about focusing on making City Hall work and jumpstarting our economy.
In every school, community center, city hall, and state capitol, there are women who are making their voices heard and standing up for the people they serve – women who aren’t just demanding change but finding ways to create it. They are making an impact, and along the way, they’re inspiring others to do the same.
In the year since we brought things into the open with a clean breath of fresh air at City Hall, we have learned about corrupt spending practices and unethical conflicts of interest that waste your money… and keep Dallas from being the great city of our dreams.
Others like City Hall the old way, when they could make deals behind closed doors with your tax money.
If City Hall started projecting swastikas, no one would say ‘You know what? Free speech.’ People would say that is wrong.
And on election night I’d go down to city hall in El Paso, Texas and cover the election. In those days, of course, we didn’t have exit polls. You didn’t know who had won the election until they actually counted the votes. I thought that was exciting too.
Under the Trump tax plan, we are no longer going to subsidize big government in blue states. Now those who choose to live in blue states are going to have to join with their neighbors, collect their pitchforks, and demand tax and spending cuts from city hall and the state capital.
Some day the workers will take possession of your city hall, and when we do, no child will be sacrificed on the altar of profit!
Now it’s time to focus on basics for people in our neighborhoods… and real ethics reform at City Hall.
And we did it because it’s time for City Hall to stop looking out for City Hall and start looking out for the people like you and me who are footing the bill.
Too often, they play to whatever group is the loudest down at City Hall, and they buy them off, essentially.