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Politics & Power Quote by Leland Stanford

"I am in favor of carrying out the Declaration of Independence to women as well as men. Women having to suffer the burdens of society and government should have their equal rights in it. They do not receive their rights in full proportion"

About this Quote

Stanford wraps a radical-sounding claim in the safest possible American packaging: the Declaration of Independence, that civic relic everyone salutes before they start arguing about who counts. By framing women's rights as a simple “carrying out” of the Declaration, he sidesteps the charge that suffrage is some foreign import or social experiment. It’s a classic move from a 19th-century businessman-politician: treat democracy like a contract that’s been inconsistently applied, not a structure that needs rebuilding.

The line that does the work is “burdens of society and government.” Stanford doesn’t appeal to spiritual equality or liberation; he appeals to ledger logic. If women pay the costs - labor, taxes, social discipline, the consequences of law - then denying them representation looks less like tradition and more like bad accounting. The subtext is transactional fairness, a rhetoric that could persuade skeptical male voters without requiring them to rethink gender roles entirely.

That last clause, “They do not receive their rights in full proportion,” is both pointed and cautious. “Proportion” implies measurement, distribution, moderation - not upheaval. It suggests he’s arguing for an adjustment to the system, not a revolt against it. Coming from a railroad magnate turned governor and senator, this matters: Stanford’s support signals how suffrage was becoming not just a moral crusade but a respectable, managerial reform. Still, the quote hints at its own limitation: women are granted rights because they shoulder burdens, not simply because they’re full citizens. It’s equality argued from utility, not dignity - persuasive, and revealing.

Quote Details

TopicEquality
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Stanford, Leland. (2026, January 16). I am in favor of carrying out the Declaration of Independence to women as well as men. Women having to suffer the burdens of society and government should have their equal rights in it. They do not receive their rights in full proportion. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-am-in-favor-of-carrying-out-the-declaration-of-99036/

Chicago Style
Stanford, Leland. "I am in favor of carrying out the Declaration of Independence to women as well as men. Women having to suffer the burdens of society and government should have their equal rights in it. They do not receive their rights in full proportion." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-am-in-favor-of-carrying-out-the-declaration-of-99036/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I am in favor of carrying out the Declaration of Independence to women as well as men. Women having to suffer the burdens of society and government should have their equal rights in it. They do not receive their rights in full proportion." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-am-in-favor-of-carrying-out-the-declaration-of-99036/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Leland Stanford (March 9, 1824 - June 21, 1893) was a Businessman from USA.

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