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Leadership Quote by Thomas Jefferson

"Delay is preferable to error"

About this Quote

Impatience is a luxury Jefferson can’t afford here, and he knows it. “Delay is preferable to error” reads like calm counsel, but it’s also a quiet assertion of statesmanship: legitimacy comes not from speed, but from getting it right when the consequences ripple through law, markets, and war.

As a president, Jefferson lived inside the machine of irreversible decisions. His era was a high-stakes stress test for a young republic: fragile institutions, limited communication, and plenty of ideological volatility. In that context, “delay” isn’t laziness; it’s procedural caution as a moral stance. He’s defending deliberation against the romantic myth of the decisive leader. The line implies that haste is not just a personal flaw but a structural danger in democratic governance, where one mistake can harden into precedent.

The subtext is also political. Jefferson, often framed as an apostle of liberty, is signaling that restraint can be more radical than action. Delay buys time for consensus, evidence, and second thoughts; it’s a hedge against vanity and the seductive certainty of power. He’s sketching a hierarchy of harms: delay costs time, maybe momentum, maybe popularity. Error costs lives, rights, credibility.

Rhetorically, it works because it’s spare and asymmetrical. “Delay” feels temporary; “error” feels permanent. The sentence makes caution sound not timid but adult - an ethics of governance distilled into six words.

Quote Details

TopicDecision-Making
Source
Verified source: Thomas Jefferson to George Washington, 16 May 1792 (Thomas Jefferson, 1792)
Text match: 99.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
However delay is preferable to error. (The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, vol. 23 (1990), pp. 518–519; also in The Papers of George Washington, Presidential Series, vol. 10 (2002), pp. 391–392). Primary-source context: Jefferson wrote this in a private letter from Philadelphia dated May 16, 1792, to President George Washington, explaining that internal review of a draft diplomatic letter would slow its delivery: “I find that these examinations will retard the delivery of it considerably. However delay is preferable to error.” The letter’s text is available on Founders Online (National Archives), which also provides the print-source citation to the authoritative documentary editions listed above.
Other candidates (1)
Control of Complex Nonlinear Systems with Delay (Philipp Hövel, 2010) compilation95.0%
Philipp Hövel. Chapter. 6. Neural. Systems. Delay is preferable to error. (Thomas Jefferson: Letter to George Washing...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Jefferson, Thomas. (2026, February 8). Delay is preferable to error. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/delay-is-preferable-to-error-25021/

Chicago Style
Jefferson, Thomas. "Delay is preferable to error." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/delay-is-preferable-to-error-25021/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Delay is preferable to error." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/delay-is-preferable-to-error-25021/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson (April 13, 1743 - July 4, 1826) was a President from USA.

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