Statue of Edmund Burke in Washington, DC On April 19, 1774, a full year before the Battle of Concord and Lexington erupted, Irish MP Edmund Burke of Dublin (1729–97) made a compelling speech in the British House of Commons in London, supporting a motion to repeal the Townsend Revenue Act, which taxed tea in the American colonies. Burke warned his colleagues that taxing the American colonies ‘three pence per pound weight upon tea, payable in all his Majesty’s dominions in America,’ was a recipe for rebellion from the colonists. This type of taxation called into question the very concept of liberty the Americans cherished, and made the British appear as tyrants. “Your scheme yields no revenue; it yields nothing but discontent, disorder, disobedience,” he said, asking his colleagues to “reflect how you are to govern a people, who think they ought to be free, and think they are not. “When you drive him hard, the boar will surely turn upon the hunters," Burke said. "If that so
Bernadette Devlin Gives her Maiden Speech in British Parliament on April 22, 1969, Decries British Oppression in Northern Ireland
Bernadette Devlin of Cookstown, Country Tyrone, was elected as the Mid Ulster MP to Westminster Parliament in 1969, and gave her maiden speech there on April 22, 1969. She was 21 years old. Her opening words set the tone of the speech and also of her political career: "I understand that in making my maiden speech on the day of my arrival in Parliament and in making it on a controversial issue I flaunt the unwritten traditions of the House, but I think that the situation of my people merits the flaunting of such traditions," she said. Read her entire speech here . Devlin criticized the political corruption and hypocrisy of the political establishment in Northern Ireland and Great Britain. She criticized "the society of landlords who, by ancient charter of Charles II, still hold the rights of the ordinary people of Northern Ireland over such things as fishing and as paying the most ridiculous and exorbitant rents, although families have lived for generations on their l