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Leadership Quote by Grover Cleveland

"Minds do not act together in public; they simply stick together; and when their private activities are resumed, they fly apart again"

About this Quote

Cleveland’s line lands like a cold splash on the romantic idea of “the public mind.” He’s arguing that crowds don’t think; they adhere. In public, people don’t synthesize evidence into shared judgment so much as latch onto the nearest consensus, slogan, or tribal cue. The verb choice matters: “stick” is passive, almost accidental, like wet leaves on a shoe. It implies proximity mistaken for unity, contact mistaken for conviction.

The second clause delivers the real bite. Once “private activities are resumed,” the crowd “flies apart” - not calmly disperses, but snaps back to individual routines and interests. Cleveland is describing public opinion as a temporary adhesive: strong enough to hold for a parade, an election rally, a moral panic, or a legislative fight; too weak to survive the return to ordinary incentives. That’s a politician’s realism, bordering on contempt, about how mass sentiment is manufactured and then evaporates.

Contextually, Cleveland governed in the age of mass-circulation newspapers, party machines, and a churning industrial society where political identity could be mobilized quickly and opportunistically. The subtext is a warning to both leaders and citizens. Leaders shouldn’t confuse a momentary swell of applause with durable consent. Citizens shouldn’t confuse being surrounded by agreement with actually arriving at it. It’s also Cleveland defending deliberation and restraint: if the public is inherently sticky rather than thoughtful, then the job of governance is to resist the crowd’s temporary glue and insist on decisions that can survive when the noise dies down.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Later attribution: Quote Junkie (Hagopian Institute, 2008) modern compilationISBN: 9781438245188 · ID: d4Do5xvqGwgC
Text match: 96.82%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Grover Cleveland Minds do not act together in public ; they simply stick together ; and when their private activities are resumed , they fly apart again . Grover Cleveland Officeholders are the agents of the people , not their masters ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Cleveland, Grover. (2026, March 24). Minds do not act together in public; they simply stick together; and when their private activities are resumed, they fly apart again. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/minds-do-not-act-together-in-public-they-simply-105318/

Chicago Style
Cleveland, Grover. "Minds do not act together in public; they simply stick together; and when their private activities are resumed, they fly apart again." FixQuotes. March 24, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/minds-do-not-act-together-in-public-they-simply-105318/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Minds do not act together in public; they simply stick together; and when their private activities are resumed, they fly apart again." FixQuotes, 24 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/minds-do-not-act-together-in-public-they-simply-105318/. Accessed 4 Apr. 2026.

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About the Author

Grover Cleveland

Grover Cleveland (March 18, 1837 - June 24, 1908) was a President from USA.

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