The Corleone Family prizes loyalty and considers betrayal to be a transgression punishable by death. However, because the Mafia’s goal is to seek power and make money by most any illegal means possible, it is a breeding ground for traitors seeking to get more than they currently have. Foiling likely attempts at betrayal, in fact, is built into the very structure of the organization. Below the Don of the Family (Don Corleone) there is the Consigliere (Tom Hagen), followed by the caporegimes (Clemenza and Tessio), who control networks of soldiers. When an order travels down the ranks, the soldiers execute it without knowing who gave the order. Thus, to implicate the Don for ordering a crime, each “link in the chain” must “turn traitor.” The necessity of such a structure, and the constant emphasis on loyalty, is itself a signal that the temptation to betray is common in the criminal life.
Puzo emphasizes throughout the novel the importance Don Corleone places on loyalty and the manner in which he cultivates it. As a young man solidifying his power in Little Italy’s criminal underworld, Vito Corleone forges loyalties by performing favors for others in exchange for their lifelong loyalty to him. “He piled up good deeds as a banker piles up securities,” Puzo writes. In this way, Corleone constructs networks of loyalties that serve as scaffolding for his burgeoning criminal empire. His penchant for building loyalties notwithstanding, Corleone still creates “layers of insulation between himself and any operational act.” He gives orders exclusively to his Consigliere, and he splits his caporegimes into different territories to prevent them from conspiring against him. Thus, for all of the loyalties Corleone cultivates, the prospect of betrayal is never far from his mind. By granting favors in exchange for loyalty, the Don cloaks his criminal empire in a sheet of benevolence built on allegiances that are the source of his empire’s strength.
Don Corleone’s fatherly status also allows him to extract loyalty from others who view him as both a benefactor and a potential foe. These people fear the Don’s power and ruthlessness, but they recognize they have much to gain by serving him. Corleone’s most loyal ally is the enforcer, Luca Brasi. A fearsome figure who murders at the Don’s behest, Brasi does not fear his fellow man, nor does he fear death or hell, but “he had chosen, to fear and love Don Corleone.” That Brasi both fears and loves his Don is indicative of the way Corleone rewards loyalty with favors to those who are well aware that he will punish betrayal with murder. As the second most powerful figure in the Corleone Family, the Consigliere Tom Hagen can, in theory, betray the Don and take power for himself. Yet Puzo writes that, “every Consigliere knew that if he kept the faith, he would become rich, wield power and win respect”—Hagen will gain more by standing with the Godfather than by rebelling against him. As a means of benefitting from Corleone’s power, Hagen promises him “complete loyalty, with complete acceptance of the Don’s parental divinity.” Because there is “no future” in betraying the Don, Hagen swears his loyalty and, by extension, bets his fortunes on the Corleone Family’s power. The loyalty of others supports Don Corleone’s power, while those who swear loyalty to him gain both financial and physical security. So long as the Don can continue to offer that security, and none of his underlings get too greedy, this arrangement holds strong.
Yet underlings do get greedy, and it’s not always clear that the Don can provide the wealth or security he promises. In such instances, betrayal occurs. For instance, fairly early in the novel, Don Corleone’s bodyguard, Paulie Gatto, wants to earn more than he already does, and so he abandons the Don so that Sollozzo’s hitmen can assassinate him. And late in the novel, just before Michael enacts his plan to regain power for the Corleones, the long-time Corleone caporegime Tessio attempts to betray him so that he falls into a trap set by the rival Barzini family. Tessio also acts out of self-interest, but it is a self-interest driven by his uncertainty about whether Michael can truly step into his father’s role as a successful head of a crime Family. Tessio thinks the Corleones are likely to fall, and so he makes the “business decision” to set him up for a post-Corleone world. Regardless of the motive behind a betrayal, though, the Corleones’ response is always vicious. Only loyalty protects the family from attacks by rivals or the police, and so if loyalty can’t be won through love, then the Corleones will get it through fear. After Paulie betrays the Corleones, the Corleone caporegime Clemenza murders Paulie and lets the police find his body in order to deter “embryo traitors.” Tessio, despite his lifetime of loyalty before his final betrayal, is similarly and swiftly executed.
The Corleone Family values loyalty above all other virtues. The Don has built his criminal empire in large part on the assurance that favors will be rewarded and debts repaid. Yet the criminal nature of the Mafia life assures that betrayal will always be a threat to the power and security of the Corleone Family, and so the family can’t simply talk about loyalty. It is bound to ensure loyalty by always responding to treachery with death.
Loyalty and Betrayal ThemeTracker
Loyalty and Betrayal Quotes in The Godfather
Luca Brasi did not fear the police, he did not fear society, he did not fear God, he did not fear hell, he did not fear or love his fellow man. But he had elected, he had chosen, to fear and love Don Corleone.
“I believe in America. America has made my fortune.”
Nothing was more calming, more conducive to pure reason, than the atmosphere of money.
“But don’t ever take sides with anybody against the Family again.”
“Revenge is a dish that tastes best when it is cold.”