I ask questions, and a large part of my life has been spent asking questions of Ken Livingstone.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I've been both a journalist and a politician, and I can tell you it is more fun to ask the questions than have to answer them.
The curse of a journalist is that he always has more questions than answers.
I'm in the business, as a journalist, of asking tough questions.
In the past, I always used to be looking for answers. Today, I know there are only questions. So I just live.
I've lost count of the times I've been asked to 'be' Malcolm Tucker: to go on a political program on television, presumably in order to be the character and give opinions as him.
If you're in the media, particularly newspapers, you are in the thick of all the interesting things that are going on in a community, and I can't imagine any other life that one would want to dedicate oneself to.
Life's most persistent and urgent question is, 'What are you doing for others?'
Over the last 20 years, everyone who interviews me feels compelled to ask at least one question about 'The Island of Dr. Moreau.'
I Kenneth Robert Livingstone, having been elected to the office of mayor of London, declare that I take that office upon myself, and will duly and faithfully fulfil the duties of it to the best of my judgement and ability.
When I heard his first songs, Dylan was answering certain questions that I had all my life been asking myself.