Skip to main content

Leadership Quote by Theodore Roosevelt

"It is essential that there should be organization of labor. This is an era of organization. Capital organizes and therefore labor must organize"

About this Quote

Roosevelt’s line is a warning dressed up as common sense: the modern economy has rules, and pretending otherwise is a luxury workers can’t afford. He frames unionization not as radical upheaval but as simple symmetry. If capital has learned to act collectively - pooling resources, coordinating strategy, bargaining from strength - then labor, left atomized, is effectively disarmed. The sentence structure does the work of a policy argument: “Capital organizes and therefore labor must organize.” It’s a tidy cause-and-effect that recasts unions as an unavoidable adaptation to industrial reality, not a moral crusade.

The subtext is classic Rooseveltian paternalism with a pragmatic edge. He isn’t romanticizing class conflict; he’s trying to manage it. Organized labor, in this view, becomes a stabilizing institution - a way to channel anger into negotiation rather than explosions of strikes, sabotage, or political extremism. That’s why the language is “essential,” not “desirable.” He’s speaking as a state-builder who sees social peace as a national asset.

Context matters: the Progressive Era’s giant trusts, brutal working conditions, and recurring labor violence made “organization” the defining keyword of the age. Roosevelt had gone after monopolies while also intervening in the 1902 coal strike, signaling that government could referee between concentrated power and concentrated desperation. The quote lands as a piece of rhetorical triangulation: pro-order, suspicious of plutocracy, and willing to legitimate unions precisely because they make capitalism governable.

Quote Details

TopicJustice
Source
Verified source: Progressive Principles (Theodore Roosevelt, 1913)
Text match: 99.30%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
It is essential that there should be organizations of labor. This is an era of organization. Capital organizes and therefore labor must organize. (Chapter V ("Progressive Cause Greater Than Any Individual"), p. 102). Primary-source context: this sentence appears in Theodore Roosevelt’s address at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, dated October 14, 1912 (the night he was shot before speaking at the Milwaukee Auditorium). The 1913 volume prints the speech (editor’s note: from a stenographic report) as Chapter V, titled “Progressive Cause Greater Than Any Individual.” The commonly-circulated version with “organization of labor” (singular) is a minor variation; the stenographic text uses “organizations of labor.” A widely used online primary-text transcription is also available at Wikisource under the speech title, with the same wording.
Other candidates (1)
Power Verbs for Managers and Executives (Michael Lawrence Faulkner, 2013) compilation97.8%
... It is essential that there should be organization of labor . This is an era of organization . Capital organizes a...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Roosevelt, Theodore. (2026, February 10). It is essential that there should be organization of labor. This is an era of organization. Capital organizes and therefore labor must organize. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/it-is-essential-that-there-should-be-organization-137736/

Chicago Style
Roosevelt, Theodore. "It is essential that there should be organization of labor. This is an era of organization. Capital organizes and therefore labor must organize." FixQuotes. February 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/it-is-essential-that-there-should-be-organization-137736/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"It is essential that there should be organization of labor. This is an era of organization. Capital organizes and therefore labor must organize." FixQuotes, 10 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/it-is-essential-that-there-should-be-organization-137736/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Theodore Add to List
Organization of Labor - Theodore Roosevelt Quote
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Theodore Roosevelt

Theodore Roosevelt (October 27, 1858 - January 6, 1919) was a President from USA.

70 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes