"Sensible and responsible women do not want to vote. The relative positions to be assumed by man and woman in the working out of our civilization were assigned long ago by a higher intelligence than ours"
About this Quote
The second sentence does the real political work. By outsourcing gender hierarchy to “a higher intelligence,” Cleveland turns a contested social arrangement into something like weather: not made by humans, not accountable to humans, not up for debate. That move launders self-interest into metaphysics. It’s also a dodge from the messy specifics of suffrage arguments (taxation, representation, labor, education) into the safer realm of Providence and “civilization,” a word that flatters the status quo by framing it as progress already achieved.
Context sharpens the intent. Cleveland’s presidency sits in the late 19th-century churn of industrial capitalism, labor unrest, and widening demands for political inclusion. Women’s suffrage was no longer a fringe idea; it was organized, public, and increasingly persuasive. His stance is less timeless conviction than defensive maintenance: a bid to stabilize a political order that relied on separate spheres, where women’s moral authority was celebrated precisely because it had no formal power.
The subtext is clear: democracy is acceptable only if it doesn’t change who runs things.
Quote Details
| Topic | Equality |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Ladies' Home Journal: Would Woman Suffrage Be Unwise? (Grover Cleveland, 1905)
Evidence: Sensible and responsible women do not want to vote. The relative positions to be assumed by man and woman in the working out of our civilization were assigned long ago by a higher intelligence than ours. (October 1905 issue; exact page not verified from the original issue). The quote is consistently attributed by historical and scholarly references to Grover Cleveland's anti-suffrage article in the Ladies' Home Journal in 1905. A primary-source archival record at the Gilder Lehrman Institute identifies Cleveland's manuscript draft for a Ladies' Home Journal article titled "Woman's Mission and Woman's Clubs," dated May 1905, showing he wrote such an article opposing women's suffrage. Multiple later scholarly references cite the published article title as "Would Woman Suffrage Be Unwise?" in Ladies' Home Journal (1905), suggesting the article may have been retitled before publication. I could verify the manuscript draft and the 1905 publication context, but I could not directly inspect the scanned October 1905 magazine pages in this session to confirm the exact printed page number or whether the published title was definitively "Would Woman Suffrage Be Unwise?" versus an editorially related title. Other candidates (1) The Affairs of Women (Colin Bingham, 2006) compilation99.4% ... Sensible and responsible women do not want to vote . The relative positions to be assumed by man and woman in the... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Cleveland, Grover. (2026, March 7). Sensible and responsible women do not want to vote. The relative positions to be assumed by man and woman in the working out of our civilization were assigned long ago by a higher intelligence than ours. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/sensible-and-responsible-women-do-not-want-to-163566/
Chicago Style
Cleveland, Grover. "Sensible and responsible women do not want to vote. The relative positions to be assumed by man and woman in the working out of our civilization were assigned long ago by a higher intelligence than ours." FixQuotes. March 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/sensible-and-responsible-women-do-not-want-to-163566/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Sensible and responsible women do not want to vote. The relative positions to be assumed by man and woman in the working out of our civilization were assigned long ago by a higher intelligence than ours." FixQuotes, 7 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/sensible-and-responsible-women-do-not-want-to-163566/. Accessed 6 Apr. 2026.





