Predictions are a mug's game.

When people stand up and talk about the great success that the EU has been, I'm not sure anybody saying it really believes it themselves anymore.

All marriages, all relationships have huge ups and downs.

I think frankly when it comes to chaos you ain't seen nothing yet.

My opponents are the people who gave up our borders.

I don't listen to music. I don't watch television, I don't read.

I love Europe! France is wonderful. It should be. We've subsidised it for 40 years.

Building walls is entirely sensible. We don't need to do it. We have got the English Channel.

Quite simply, without UKIP, there would not have been a referendum. I am convinced that the 'we want our country back, we want our borders back' message that we took across the country on an open-top double decker energised non-voters to back Brexit.

Brexit was the first brick that was knocked out of the establishment wall.

We shouldn't measure everything in terms of GDP figures or economics. There is something called quality of life.

I don't feel we need to be independent for me to feel confident in my Scottish identity. I think Scotland is pretty comfortable in its identity. We won't need independence to preserve it... if we don't become independent, it won't disappear; it isn't under existential threat.

Tory governments are bad for Scotland.

I don't know Ed Miliband as a person particularly well.

We will never vote for the renewal of Trident; that's a decision which will fall to be made in the next Westminster parliament. We will never vote for that.

Most politicians come into politics because they want to make a difference; we just have different ideas how to do it.

Maybe its time for politicians to fight back a little bit in terms of this notion that politicians are all in it for themselves, we're all the same, we're not driven by sincere motives. Because the fact of the matter is the vast majority are.

I want there to be another independence referendum at some stage. I want Scotland to be independent, but I wouldn't choose to have it happen because England votes to come out of the E.U.

I think the Tories are doing - and are intent on doing - damage to things I hold dear.

I admire Obama.

Our opposition to Trident is very clear, very firm, very long-standing, very principled, and we would seek to build an alliance to prevent the renewal of Trident.

Our MPs will take decisions on how they're voting on a day-to-day basis. But I'm the leader of the party, and in terms of our overall strategy and how we vote on key issues, then ultimately, those decisions will be mine.

I'm not making any secret of the fact I still believe in independence. We'll continue to argue the case.

I'm manifestly not the same as Alex Salmond. I'm a different gender, for example... I'm being flippant, but maybe this is a partly gender-driven difference: I'm very keen that we find a way of reaching out across party divides to find things we agree on, as well as the things we disagree on.