"All men having power ought to be distrusted to a certain degree"
About this Quote
The intent is architectural. Madison helped design a system that treats virtue as a bonus, not a requirement: checks and balances, separated powers, ambition countering ambition. The subtext is almost clinically anti-romantic about politics. Don’t ask citizens to find saints; build institutions that assume ordinary humans, with ordinary appetites, will do what humans do when given leverage. That’s a brutal downgrade of the Enlightenment fantasy that reason alone will govern.
Context matters: a young republic terrified of recreating the monarchy it had just escaped, yet equally wary of democratic mob rule and state-level turbulence (debtor relief, paper money schemes, factional brinkmanship). Madison’s distrust isn’t anti-government so much as anti-concentration. He’s marking a boundary between legitimate authority and unaccountable power.
What makes the line work is its restraint. He doesn’t demonize “men having power”; he normalizes skepticism as a permanent setting, not a temporary mood. In a political culture that still sells candidates as saviors, Madison’s sentence reads like a user manual: trust the system you can audit, not the person you want to believe.
Quote Details
| Topic | Ethics & Morality |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Madison, James. (2026, January 17). All men having power ought to be distrusted to a certain degree. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-men-having-power-ought-to-be-distrusted-to-a-31798/
Chicago Style
Madison, James. "All men having power ought to be distrusted to a certain degree." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-men-having-power-ought-to-be-distrusted-to-a-31798/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"All men having power ought to be distrusted to a certain degree." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-men-having-power-ought-to-be-distrusted-to-a-31798/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2026.






