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Leadership Quote by Grover Cleveland

"The ship of democracy, which has weathered all storms, may sink through the mutiny of those on board"

About this Quote

A storm is the kind of threat democracies like to mythologize: outside danger, heroic endurance, the reassuring idea that institutions are strongest when tested. Cleveland flips the script. The real catastrophe, he warns, is not a hurricane but sabotage: the “mutiny of those on board.” It’s a bracing metaphor from a president who lived through the Gilded Age’s feverish mix of machine politics, patronage, labor unrest, and widening inequality - an era when the republic’s problems didn’t always arrive wearing a foreign flag. They arrived as insiders gaming the system.

The line is doing two jobs at once. On the surface it’s a plea for civic discipline: democracy can survive external shocks if citizens and officials keep faith. Underneath it’s an indictment of self-interested actors who treat democratic government as a vessel to loot, not a shared project to steer. “Mutiny” implies betrayal by people who understand the ship’s workings and decide, anyway, to seize it - party bosses, corrupt officeholders, demagogues, even voters tempted by short-term rewards. Cleveland’s subtext is moralistic and procedural: democracy isn’t fragile because it’s weak; it’s fragile because it depends on voluntary restraint.

Rhetorically, the sentence tightens the threat. “Has weathered all storms” sets up complacency, the national habit of assuming durability equals invincibility. “May sink” punctures that comfort with conditional dread: collapse is not destiny, it’s a choice made from within. The warning lands because it refuses romance. Democracies don’t always die in battle. Sometimes they’re scuttled by the crew.

Quote Details

TopicFreedom
Source
Later attribution: Politically Incorrect Guide to the Presidents, Part 1 (Larry Schweikart, 2017) modern compilation
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Grover Cleveland was the first president, ever, to confront the growing size of government and try to control it ... The ship of democracy, which has weathered all storms, may sink through the mutiny of those on board.” —Grover ...
Other candidates (2)
Grover Cleveland (Grover Cleveland) compilation88.9%
ervin 1974 by paul r clancy the ship of democracy which has weathered all storms may sink through the mutiny of those...
Speech of Grover Cleveland, president of the United State... (Cleveland, Grover, 1837-1908, 1896) primary36.1%
ations for his watchful care which has shielded them from dire disaster and pointed out to them the way of peace and ...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Cleveland, Grover. (2026, February 7). The ship of democracy, which has weathered all storms, may sink through the mutiny of those on board. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-ship-of-democracy-which-has-weathered-all-112529/

Chicago Style
Cleveland, Grover. "The ship of democracy, which has weathered all storms, may sink through the mutiny of those on board." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-ship-of-democracy-which-has-weathered-all-112529/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The ship of democracy, which has weathered all storms, may sink through the mutiny of those on board." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-ship-of-democracy-which-has-weathered-all-112529/. Accessed 7 Feb. 2026.

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The Ship of Democracy May Sink Through Mutiny
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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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