George Washington

George Washington, first President of the United States of America. (© illuminating images - stock.adobe.com)

Before He Left Office, Washington Warned About Nation’s Greatest Threat: Us

In A Nutshell

  • America will mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence in 2026, followed by the 250th anniversary of George Washington’s Farewell Address in 2046.
  • Washington’s Farewell Address warned less about foreign entanglements and more about domestic dangers like partisanship, public debt, and manipulative leaders.
  • He feared that political factions could be exploited by “ambitious, and unprincipled men,” threatening liberty and the Constitution itself.
  • Washington’s message remains strikingly relevant today, highlighting how unchecked partisanship can consume democracy rather than strengthen it.

The United States will celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, the country’s founding document, in 2026. Twenty years later, America will celebrate the 250th anniversary of President George Washington’s Farewell Address, which was published on Sept. 19, 1796.

The two documents are the bookends of the American Revolution. That revolution began with the inspirational language of Thomas Jefferson, who wrote much of the Declaration of Independence; it ended with somber warnings from Washington, the nation’s first president.

After chairing the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia and serving eight years as president, Washington announced in a newspaper essay that he would not seek another term and would return to his home in Mount Vernon. The essay was later known as the “Farewell Address.”

Washington began his essay by observing that “choice and prudence invite me to quit the political scene” while “patriotism does not forbid it.” The new nation would be fine without his continued service.

But Washington’s confidence in the general health of the union was tempered by his worries about dangers that lay ahead – worries that seem startlingly contemporary and relevant 229 years later.

A yellowed newspaper page from 1796 that contains George Washington's Farewell Address.
George Washington’s Farewell Address printed in the Virginia Herald with this introduction: ‘The importance of the following Address has induced us to lay it before our Readers; as early as possible, for their gratification.’ Courtesy of The Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association, CC BY

Focus On The Domestic

Washington’s Farewell Address is famous for the admonitions “to steer clear of permanent alliances” and to resist the temptation to “entangle our peace and prosperity in the toils of European ambition.”

Important as those warnings are, they are not the main topic of Washington’s message.

During the four decades that I have taught the Farewell Address in classes on American government, I have urged my students to set aside the familiar issues of foreign policy and isolationism and to read the address for what it says about the domestic challenges confronting America.

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Those challenges included partisanship, parochialism, excessive public debt, ambitious leaders who could come to power playing off our differences, and a poorly informed public who might sacrifice their own liberties to find relief from divisive politics.

Washington’s address lacks Jefferson’s idealism about equality and inalienable rights. Instead, it offers the realistic assessment that Americans are sometimes foolish and make costly political mistakes.

Rule By ‘Ambitious, And Unprincipled Men’

Partisanship is the primary problem for the American republic, according to Washington.

“It serves always to distract the public councils and enfeeble the public administration,” he wrote. Partisanship “agitates the community with ill founded jealousies and false alarms, kindles the animosity of one part against another, foments occasionally riot and insurrection” and can open “the door to foreign influence and corruption.”

Though political parties, Washington observes, “may now and then answer popular ends,” they can also become “potent engines by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government, destroying afterwards the very engines which have lifted them to unjust dominion.”

Washington’s fear that partisanship could lead to destruction of the Constitution and to the rule of “ambitious, and unprincipled men” was so important to him that he felt compelled to repeat the warning more than once in the Farewell Address.

George Washington Farewell Address
George Washington’s Farewell Address, page 2. Washington advised American citizens to view themselves as a cohesive unit and avoid political parties. (Image by Everett Collection on Shutterstock)

Politicians’ ‘Elevation On The Ruins Of Public Liberty’

The second time Washington takes it up, he says that “the disorders and miseries” of partisanship may “gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in the absolute power of an individual.”

Sooner or later, he writes, “the chief of some prevailing faction, more able or more fortunate than his competitors, turns this disposition to the purposes of his own elevation on the ruins of public liberty.”

So why not outlaw parties and rein in the dangers of partisanship?

Washington observes that this is not possible. The spirit of party “is inseparable from our nature, having its root in the strongest passions of the human mind.”

Americans naturally collect themselves into groups, factions, interests and parties because that’s what human beings do. It’s easier to be connected to local communities, states or regions of the country than to a large and diverse nation; even though that large and diverse nation is, by Washington’s assessment, essential to the security and success of all.

The central problem in American politics is not a matter of devious leaders, foreign intrigue or sectional rivalries — things that will always exist. The problem, Washington warned, lies with the people.

Excesses Of Partisanship

By their nature, people divide themselves into groups and then, if not careful, find those divisions used and abused by individual leaders, foreign interests and “artful and enterprising” minorities.

Political parties are dangerous, but can’t be eliminated. According to some people, Washington observes, the competition between parties might serve as a check on the powers of government.

“Within certain limits,” Washington acknowledges, “this is probably true.” But even if the battles between political parties sometimes have a useful purpose, Washington worried about the excesses of partisanship.

Partisanship is like “a fire not to be quenched, it demands a uniform vigilance to prevent its bursting into a flame, lest instead of warming it should consume.”

Where is America today? Warmed by the fires of partisanship or consumed by the bursting of flames? George Washington suggested that provocative question more than two centuries ago on Sept. 19, 1796. It’s still worth asking.

Robert A. Strong, Emeritus Professor of Politics, Washington and Lee University; Senior Fellow, Miller Center, University of Virginia. He does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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12 Comments

  1. Tom H says:

    Yet no comments about a president who was unable to do his job while others ran the country.

  2. Mark says:

    Washington the Real Estate shrill .
    Now that all the free(sic) land has run out we fight like Europeans over borders.

  3. Mark says:

    Washington the Real Estate shrill ?
    Well now all the free(sic) land has run out
    and we are fighting like Europe.

  4. J Lei says:

    He was referring to Obama. Someone who was placed in power and had never done anything to get there. Ambitious, but no history and no one really knows who is pulling the strings.

  5. JEFFCOMO says:

    Washington worried U.S.A. demise. That didn’t take long.

  6. Lee says:

    Funny, these types of fear mongering and insuating articles (“the President is turning into a dictator,” “the administration is seizing power,” “they’re going to take our freedoms,” “liberty is threatened,” etc etc) during the administrations of Obama or Biden. Never once in the Big Media were these warnings uttered (though they were largely true as those aforementioned Presidents hurt the Nation badly with open borders, insane spending and fraud, stolen elections (probably true for those that care to look), healthcare destruction, Covid atrocities, etc etc.

    Not once did you see an article or newscast talking like this.

    You people make me laugh with your blinders on.

  7. Mike says:

    Washington did not have social media. Preaching the correct way things should play out, yet he was the biggest land owner in the country taking most of Virginia from the Indians. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.

  8. John Sheets says:

    Strong writes “ I have urged my students to set aside the familiar issues of foreign policy and isolationism and to read the address for what it says about the domestic challenges confronting America.”. So you cherry pick by agenda what to believe is relevant. Gotcha.

    1. Henry Southport says:

      That is not “cherry picking”. If you read carefully, he is saying that while the foreign policy aspects are well known, care should also be taken to consider Washington’s strictures about domestic politics.

  9. Bern74 says:

    This has been a problem for at least 150 years. Are you surprised?

  10. Steven says:

    These comments and articles would be better represented in the prior presidency.

  11. Robert Billeaud says:

    I think the answer to the question at the end is obvious, or should be. Very few votes are not along strictly partisan lines, even if the ideas are good. You’ll hear a politician saying one thing about a certain issue, only to see them flip-flop if the solution is proposed by a member of the opposition. For example, you’ll find a slew of Democrats opposing illegal immigration during the Obama administration and then vehemently supporting it when Trump is in power. The same thing happens on the other side. When elections roll around, it’s never about getting the best person for the job, it’s let’s make sure our guy wins so we can keep the majority. In fact, a lot of times these days, the issues are not even mentioned. It’s not pick Bob, because Bob will do x, it’s pick Bob because it’s another seat for our side.