Prime Minister, I see you've already mastered the essential craft of the European politician, namely, the ability to say one thing in this chamber and a very different thing to your home electorate.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The next leader of this country needs to be someone who believes heart and soul that Britain should be outside the European Union.
I am not a newcomer, you know, so I want to be judged for what I did when I was prime minister last time in Italy and president of the European Commission for more than five years.
Find enough clever things to say, and you're a Prime Minister; write them down and you're a Shakespeare.
Being a prime minister is a very demanding job. And as long as I have the strength, I will continue to do this and be of benefit to my country.
As Tony Blair has made clear, our fundamental challenge is how to make Europe work better.
Therefore one should speak at the same time of national citizenship and wider European citizenship.
I am a partisan and artisan of Europe. But I draw the lessons of my experience in government.
Yes, I don't think I shall ever become Prime Minister. Hard as that is to swallow, I tell you one person who is very happy always to see me say that, and that's my wife.
Europe has a lot of strength. We need to pool that strength, and I am very much in favour of that - more of a deeper political union.
I would like to sound like James Mason. I reckon if I'd had a better voice I could have been prime minister. It is the most irritating voice in public life.