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Tim Scott

Read through the most famous quotes from Tim Scott




South Carolina is a great place to be from.


— Tim Scott


#great #place #south #south carolina

Starting and feeding into the cultural war is absolutely unequivocally wrong for us as a nation and bad for the conservative movement.


— Tim Scott


#bad #conservative #conservative movement #cultural #cultural war

The first time that I was elected I was called the Judas Iscariot of the black community because I took a stand that was inconsistent of cutting across the grain.


— Tim Scott


#because #black #black community #called #community

The future of the Republican Party and the future of America is based on a values system and the issues that drive those values are on our side.


— Tim Scott


#based #drive #future #issues #our

There is nothing special about Tim Scott.


— Tim Scott


#nothing #scott #special #tim

There is nothing special about Tim Scott. I'm an ordinary guy serving an extraordinary God and that makes the difference.


— Tim Scott


#difference #extraordinary #god #guy #i

We have to attack those things which stand in the way of America progress. And what stands in the way of American progress right now is the federal government.


— Tim Scott


#american #attack #federal #federal government #government

When I was in the 9th grade I was flunking out of high school. And that's why I'm so encouraged by the fact that America is the place where opportunity and American exceptionalism is alive and well.


— Tim Scott


#america #american #encouraged #fact #grade






About Tim Scott

Tim Scott Quotes




Did you know about Tim Scott?

Scott ranked first in the nine candidate Republican primary of June 8 2010 receiving a plurality of 32% of the vote. S. S.

A graduate of Charleston Southern University Scott owns an insurance agency and has worked as a financial advisor. Previously Scott served one term in the South Carolina General Assembly (2009–2011) and 13 years on the Charleston County Council (1996–2008). Elected in November 2010 to the 112th Congress he was the first Republican African-American Representative from South Carolina since 1897.

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