"The greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse"
About this Quote
The line also carries Burke's signature suspicion of abstract virtue. He lived through an era when rulers claimed to govern for reason, for empire, for enlightenment. Burke's point is that high-minded justifications don't shrink the risks of power; they often expand them, because they let coercion dress up as necessity. When authority can act at distance, through bureaucracy or empire, it becomes easier to harm without seeing the harmed. Abuse turns impersonal, then defensible.
Context matters: Burke was a fierce critic of British misconduct in India (notably the impeachment of Warren Hastings) and a wary observer of revolutionary politics in France. In both cases, he watched power unmoor itself from restraint, tradition, and accountability, then outsource its conscience to ideology or administrative convenience. The sentence is compact because it needs to be: it functions as a principle for constitutional design, arguing that the question isn't whether power will be abused, but how much damage its misuse can do, and how hard it is to reverse once it has momentum.
Quote Details
| Topic | Ethics & Morality |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Speech Relative to the Middlesex Election (Feb. 7, 1771) (Edmund Burke, 1771)
Evidence: First, because the greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse. (null). Primary-source context: the line appears in Edmund Burke's speech in the House of Commons on February 7, 1771, titled in later collections as "Speech Relative to the Middlesex Election." In the Project Gutenberg transcription of "The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke" (Vol. VII, 1887 Nimmo ed.), the sentence occurs at line 398 in that speech. This Gutenberg file is a later reprint/transcription, but it preserves the wording of Burke's speech; Gutenberg does not provide original 1771 paging, so a page number cannot be reliably given from this source alone. Other candidates (1) The works of ... Edmund Burke (Edmund Burke, 1886) compilation95.0% Edmund Burke. Carry the principle on by which you expelled Mr. Wilkes , there is not a man in the House , hardly ... ... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Burke, Edmund. (2026, February 16). The greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-greater-the-power-the-more-dangerous-the-abuse-19211/
Chicago Style
Burke, Edmund. "The greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-greater-the-power-the-more-dangerous-the-abuse-19211/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-greater-the-power-the-more-dangerous-the-abuse-19211/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.













