I have to give a lot of credit to Sandy Weill, because he gets it. He gets the power of the women's contribution to the economy.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
If you economically empower a woman, she represents enormous opportunity that can actually be transformative not only for her family and for her community, but at the aggregate level for the economy.
Women now influence the majority of consumer purchases. It is women's votes that will secure victory at the next election, hence the altogether delicious spectacle of Messrs Brown and Cameron vying to tell stories about broken nights and childcare as men once boasted of goals scored or pheasants bagged.
Here at home, President Obama early on made the connection between growth and economic opportunity for women. In the depths of our crisis in 2009, one of the first laws the president signed was the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act. He established an Equal Pay Task Force led by Valerie Jarrett to help women get paid what they earn.
In order for our country and economy to get on the right track again, we need a leader who understands how the real economy works and has the vision to fundamentally change Washington. That leader is Mitt Romney.
I absolutely think women's perspectives should be considered in making economic decisions.
There's obviously a correlation between an economically empowered woman and the investments she makes. That leads to her social and moral conscience for bettering her community.
Mitt Romney, you can criticize him for a lot of things, and that's fair, but he knows how the economy works.
So much research has been done showing that the woman is the most vulnerable but also the biggest strength leading to economic progress.
Sloan Gibson is doing a great job. We need to give him more power to terminate employees.
For women who turn to welfare, Big Brother becomes Husband.
No opposing quotes found.