Words matter. These are the best Amber Rudd Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
As the U.K. prepares to leave the E.U., we have an opportunity to leverage our reputation for integrity and fair play as we establish new trading relationships.
We have a cadre of home-grown cyber-skilled professionals to meet the demands of an increasingly digital world, in the public and private sectors and in defence.
National projects have to come from the top.
I’m committed to working with business, both large and small, to make sure we don’t impose unnecessary burdens or create damaging labour shortages.
I’m absolutely committed to Hastings.
We can’t treat issues as taboo because we find them unpleasant.
Britain First has deeply ignoble form on trying to ‘hijack’ the poppy to increase their popularity and donations.
Before entering Parliament, I spent my career in the city and in business.
In my 20s, I was leaving university, getting married, or having a baby. And then, in my 30s, I was just keeping my head above water. When I hit 40, I thought, ‘I have got to get a grip of my life and really point it in the direction I want it to go rather than just swim hard against the current.’
Tackling violence on our streets is a complex problem, and we need not only all parties, but whole communities to come together to tackle it.
The public must have confidence in our ability to control immigration – in terms of type and volume – from within the E.U. That is why, once we have left the E.U., this government will apply its own immigration rules and requirements that will meet the needs of U.K. businesses, but also of wider society.
The enemy online is fast. They are ruthless. They prey on the vulnerable and disenfranchised. They use the very best of innovation for the most evil of ends.
Yes, good presentation is a vehicle for enhancing people and policies. But if the presentation fails, we have to look beyond the wrapping and see what is actually contained in the package, to see the substance of it.
The men and women of our emergency services are the very best of us.
Bringing up children on my own was quite a busy time.
Under Mr. Corbyn, Labour are a shambles.
Haven’t we all been taken aback when an illness suddenly causes the voice to crack and sometimes dry up completely?
The first duty of any government is to protect its citizens, whether the threat is a domestic one or from abroad.
I’m passionately committed to making sure our world-leading institutions can attract the brightest and the best. But a student immigration system that treats every student and university as equal only punishes those we should want to help.
Be in no doubt: we are completely committed to make sure we support young people with the additional resources that are necessary to give them the alternatives to the offer that’s put forward by the terrible criminals on the streets.
Let there be no doubt: we will be tough on terror wherever it strikes.
As home secretary, I will work to ensure that our immigration policy is fair and humane.
My job as Home Secretary is to keep families and communities across our country safe.
If you run your company pension into the ground, saddling it with massive, unsustainable debts, we’re coming for you.
We are critically dependent on the Internet, and it’s ingrained in our way of life.
Labour are a danger to our security and our economy and are wholly incapable of negotiating the best Brexit deal for Britain.
I’m afraid in my family we still laugh now about the fact that I was called ‘stubborn’ and my brother was called ‘determined.’
Most of the people I came across in the finance and business world were honest people, doing the best for their staff and for their family. But I encountered many who weren’t.
To secure our future prosperity, we must do all that we can to make sure that Britain remains one of the safest and cleanest places in the world to do business.
A national government has to have national priorities.
One of the biggest challenges for any Home Secretary – indeed, any government – is how we deal with emerging threats.
Put simply, the U.K. must remain a hub for international talent.
I hadn’t really thought about politics as a career in my twenties or early thirties.
We should be able to have a conversation about immigration; we should be able to have a conversation about what skills we want to have in the U.K. and whether we need to go out of the U.K. in order to get them to boost our economy, and I don’t think we should have a situation where we can’t talk about it.
Don’t call me a racist.
When we talk about famine, people start listing, as I have, its many different elements. We must not let the complexity of the subject put us off. We must continue putting our efforts into prevention.
We need to make sure that organisations like WhatsApp – and there are plenty of others like that – don’t provide a secret place for terrorists to communicate with each other.
We give parity to all terrorism regardless of ideology.
I see no difference between a violent Islamist and a far-Right terrorist.
For my part, let me be clear: protecting those in society most at risk of harm, those crushed at the bottom of the heap, those who have been abused by the very people who should have looked after them, is, as home secretary, my job, but I also see it is as my moral duty.
We must not let hate win.
We work incredibly hard with our E.U. and international partners to make the online space a hostile one for terrorists.
The U.K. government has been clear that it wants to use the opportunity of leaving the E.U. to design a future immigration system that works in the best interests of the country. A key part of this system must be creating an environment that allows us to achieve sustainable levels of net migration.
You get people who are on benefits who prefer to be on benefits by the seaside.