First Inaugural Address
Grover Cleveland
Capitol Building, Washington, DC
March 4, 1885
Fellow citizens, in the presence of this vast
assemblage of my countrymen I am about to supplement and seal by the
oath which I shall take the manifestation of the will of a great and
free people. In the exercise of their power and right of
self-government they have committed to one of their fellow-citizens
a supreme and sacred trust, and he here consecrates himself to their
service.
This impressive ceremony adds little to the solemn sense of
responsibility with which I contemplate the duty I owe to all the
people of the land. Nothing can relieve me from anxiety lest by any
act of mine their interests may suffer, and nothing is needed to
strengthen my resolution to engage every faculty and effort in the
promotion of their welfare.
Amid the din of party strife the people's choice was made, but its
attendant circumstances have demonstrated anew the strength and
safety of a government by the people. In each succeeding year it
more clearly appears that our democratic principle needs no apology,
and that in its fearless and faithful application is to be found the
surest guaranty of good government.
But the best results in the operation of a government wherein every
citizen has a share largely depend upon a proper limitation of
purely partisan zeal and effort and a correct appreciation of the
time when the heat of the partisan should be merged in the
patriotism of the citizen.
Today the executive branch of the Government is transferred to new
keeping. But this is still the Government of all the people, and it
should be none the less an object of their affectionate solicitude.
At this hour the animosities of political strife, the bitterness of
partisan defeat, and the exultation of partisan triumph should be
supplanted by an ungrudging acquiescence in the popular will and a
sober, conscientious concern for the general weal. Moreover, if from
this hour we cheerfully and honestly abandon all sectional prejudice
and distrust, and determine, with manly confidence in one another,
to work out harmoniously the achievements of our national destiny,
we shall deserve to realize all the benefits which our happy form of
government can bestow.
On this auspicious occasion we may well renew the pledge of our
devotion to the Constitution, which, launched by the founders of the
Republic and consecrated by their prayers and patriotic devotion,
has for almost a century borne the hopes and the aspirations of a
great people through prosperity and peace and through the shock of
foreign conflicts and the perils of domestic strife and
vicissitudes.
By the Father of his Country our Constitution was commended for
adoption as "the result of a spirit of amity and mutual concession."
In that same spirit it should be administered, in order to promote
the lasting welfare of the country and to secure the full measure of
its priceless benefits to us and to those who will succeed to the
blessings of our national life. The large variety of diverse and
competing interests subject to Federal control, persistently seeking
the recognition of their claims, need give us no fear that "the
greatest good to the greatest number" will fail to be accomplished
if in the halls of national legislation that spirit of amity and
mutual concession shall prevail in which the Constitution had its
birth. If this involves the surrender or postponement of private
interests and the abandonment of local advantages, compensation will
be found in the assurance that the common interest is subserved and
the general welfare advanced.
In the discharge of my official duty I shall endeavor to be guided
by a just and unstrained construction of the Constitution, a careful
observance of the distinction between the powers granted to the
Federal Government and those reserved to the States or to the
people, and by a cautious appreciation of those functions which by
the Constitution and laws have been especially assigned to the
executive branch of the Government.
But he who takes the oath today to preserve, protect, and defend the
Constitution of the United States only assumes the solemn obligation
which every patriotic citizen -- on the farm, in the workshop, in
the busy marts of trade, and everywhere -- should share with him.
The Constitution which prescribes his oath, my countrymen, is yours;
the Government you have chosen him to administer for a time is
yours; the suffrage which executes the will of freemen is yours; the
laws and the entire scheme of our civil rule, from the town meeting
to the State capitals and the national capital, is yours. Your every
voter, as surely as your Chief Magistrate, under the same high
sanction, though in a different sphere, exercises a public trust.
Nor is this all. Every citizen owes to the country a vigilant watch
and close scrutiny of its public servants and a fair and reasonable
estimate of their fidelity and usefulness. Thus is the people's will
impressed upon the whole framework of our civil polity--municipal,
State, and Federal; and this is the price of our liberty and the
inspiration of our faith in the Republic.
It is the duty of those serving the people in public place to
closely limit public expenditures to the actual needs of the
Government economically administered, because this bounds the right
of the Government to exact tribute from the earnings of labor or the
property of the citizen, and because public extravagance begets
extravagance among the people. We should never be ashamed of the
simplicity and prudential economies which are best suited to the
operation of a republican form of government and most compatible
with the mission of the American people. Those who are selected for
a limited time to manage public affairs are still of the people, and
may do much by their example to encourage, consistently with the
dignity of their official functions, that plain way of life which
among their fellow citizens aids integrity and promotes thrift and
prosperity.
The genius of our institutions, the needs of our people in their
home life, and the attention which is demanded for the settlement
and development of the resources of our vast territory dictate the
scrupulous avoidance of any departure from that foreign policy
commended by the history, the traditions, and the prosperity of our
Republic. It is the policy of independence, favored by our position
and defended by our known love of justice and by our power. It is
the policy of peace suitable to our interests. It is the policy of
neutrality, rejecting any share in foreign broils and ambitions upon
other continents and repelling their intrusion here. It is the
policy of Monroe and of Washington and Jefferson -- "Peace,
commerce, and honest friendship with all nations; entangling
alliance with none."
A due regard for the interests and prosperity of all the people
demands that our finances shall be established upon such a sound and
sensible basis as shall secure the safety and confidence of business
interests and make the wage of labor sure and steady, and that our
system of revenue shall be so adjusted as to relieve the people of
unnecessary taxation, having a due regard to the interests of
capital invested and workingmen employed in American industries, and
preventing the accumulation of a surplus in the Treasury to tempt
extravagance and waste.
Care for the property of the nation and for the needs of future
settlers requires that the public domain should be protected from
purloining schemes and unlawful occupation.
The conscience of the people demands that the Indians within our
boundaries shall be fairly and honestly treated as wards of the
Government and their education and civilization promoted with a view
to their ultimate citizenship, and that polygamy in the Territories,
destructive of the family relation and offensive to the moral sense
of the civilized world, shall be repressed.
The laws should be rigidly enforced which prohibit the immigration
of a servile class to compete with American labor, with no intention
of acquiring citizenship, and bringing with them and retaining
habits and customs repugnant to our civilization.
The people demand reform in the administration of the Government and
the application of business principles to public affairs. As a means
to this end, civil-service reform should be in good faith enforced.
Our citizens have the right to protection from the incompetency of
public employees who hold their places solely as the reward of
partisan service, and from the corrupting influence of those who
promise and the vicious methods of those who expect such rewards;
and those who worthily seek public employment have the right to
insist that merit and competency shall be recognized instead of
party subserviency or the surrender of honest political belief.
In the administration of a government pledged to do equal and exact
justice to all men there should be no pretext for anxiety touching
the protection of the freedmen in their rights or their security in
the enjoyment of their privileges under the Constitution and its
amendments. All discussion as to their fitness for the place
accorded to them as American citizens is idle and unprofitable
except as it suggests the necessity for their improvement. The fact
that they are citizens entitles them to all the rights due to that
relation and charges them with all its duties, obligations, and
responsibilities.
These topics and the constant and ever-varying wants of an active
and enterprising population may well receive the attention and the
patriotic endeavor of all who make and execute the Federal law. Our
duties are practical and call for industrious application, an
intelligent perception of the claims of public office, and, above
all, a firm determination, by united action, to secure to all the
people of the land the full benefits of the best form of government
ever vouchsafed to man. And let us not trust to human effort alone,
but humbly acknowledging the power and goodness of Almighty God, who
presides over the destiny of nations, and who has at all times been
revealed in our country's history, let us invoke His aid and His
blessings upon our labors.
|