"He serves his party best who serves his country best"
About this Quote
Hayes is speaking from a moment when that hierarchy felt urgently contested. His presidency was born out of the disputed 1876 election and the Compromise of 1877, with federal power retreating from Reconstruction in exchange for political peace. That backdrop makes the quote read less like a civics-poster platitude and more like a defensive maneuver: an attempt to launder legitimacy through patriotism. If the country must come first, then the messy dealmaking that put him in office can be recast as national triage rather than partisan capture.
The subtext carries a warning to the spoils system and machine politics that dominated the era. Hayes pushed civil service reform, and this sentence offers its moral argument in miniature: public office shouldn’t be a party’s payroll. But it also contains a politician’s escape hatch. “Country” is an elastic word, easily claimed by whoever holds the microphone. By equating the nation’s interest with his own governing priorities, Hayes can pressure dissenters inside his coalition without denouncing the coalition itself.
It’s effective rhetoric because it promises unity without demanding ideological surrender: serve your party, yes, but only by making it worthy of the flag.
Quote Details
| Topic | Servant Leadership |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Rutherford B. Hayes's Inaugural Address (Rutherford B. Hayes, 1877)
Evidence: but he should strive to be always mindful of the fact that he serves his party best who serves the country best. (March 5, 1877 inaugural address; exact line appears in the civil service reform section). This quote is verifiably in Hayes's own inaugural address, delivered publicly on March 5, 1877, and therefore is a primary source. The commonly circulated version changes 'the country' to 'his country.' I also found an earlier pre-inaugural letter from Carl Schurz to Hayes dated January 25, 1877, suggesting similar wording: Hayes should remember 'that you will serve that party best by serving the public interest best.' That supports the idea that Schurz may have influenced the phrasing, but the earliest verified instance of the quote in the form attributed to Hayes is Hayes's inaugural address itself, not a book or later quotation collection. Other candidates (1) Rutherford B. Hayes (Ari Arthur Hoogenboom, 1995) compilation95.0% ... Hayes confessed , left him and Lucy " with a certain incapacity to tell the ... president knew that Garfield's vi... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Hayes, Rutherford B. (2026, March 8). He serves his party best who serves his country best. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-serves-his-party-best-who-serves-his-country-154761/
Chicago Style
Hayes, Rutherford B. "He serves his party best who serves his country best." FixQuotes. March 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-serves-his-party-best-who-serves-his-country-154761/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"He serves his party best who serves his country best." FixQuotes, 8 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-serves-his-party-best-who-serves-his-country-154761/. Accessed 18 Mar. 2026.












