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Politics & Power Quote by John Quincy Adams

"Always vote for principle, though you may vote alone, and you may cherish the sweetest reflection that your vote is never lost"

About this Quote

Adams frames the lonely vote as a kind of moral investment, not a bid for immediate power. The line turns what most people fear in politics - isolation, irrelevance, being outnumbered - into a badge of civic adulthood. Its engine is consolation with teeth: yes, you may vote alone, and yes, that might change nothing today, but the act still counts because it aligns you with principle rather than the crowd.

The intent is partly instructional, partly prophylactic. Early American democracy was messy, factional, and deeply suspicious of party spirit even as parties were rapidly hardening. Adams, a patrician Federalist-turned-nationalist in a country learning how to be a mass electorate, is trying to inoculate citizens against the cheap logic of winning. He’s also defending a statesman’s ethic: legitimacy comes from conscience and constitutional duty, not from applause.

The subtext is where the pressure lives. “Never lost” is deliberately ambiguous. Your ballot may be “lost” in the tally, but it isn’t lost in the historical ledger. Adams is asking voters to imagine politics on a longer time scale than the news cycle: today’s minority can be tomorrow’s standard, and recorded dissent is a seed. There’s an implied warning too: if you outsource judgment to the majority, you’re not participating in self-government; you’re just taking attendance.

It’s a high-minded argument, but not naïve. It recognizes that democracy can punish integrity in the short run, then dares the individual to accept that cost as the price of being more than a partisan instrument.

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TopicHonesty & Integrity
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John Quincy Adams Quote on Voting by Principle
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John Quincy Adams

John Quincy Adams (July 11, 1767 - 1848) was a President from USA.

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