Women's Tax Resistance League

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Tax resistance

Main topics

Civil Disobedience (Thoreau)
Conscientious objection to military taxation
History of tax resistance
Religious Freedom Peace Tax Fund Act
Tax resisters
The Cold War and the Income Tax: A Protest

Organizations

Association of Real Estate Taxpayers
National Campaign for a Peace Tax Fund
National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee
Northern California War Tax Resistance
Peacemakers
Women's Tax Resistance League

Campaigns

Beit Sahour
Champaran and Kheda Satyagraha
Salt Satyagraha

Related

Christian anarchism
Civil disobedience
Conscientious objection
Direct action
Divestment
Economic secession
Nonviolent resistance
Peace churches
Religious Society of Friends
“Render unto Caesar...”
Tax avoidance and tax evasion
Tax protesters
Underground economy

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The Women’s Tax Resistance League was a direct action group associated with the Women's Social and Political Union in the British women’s suffrage movement that used tax resistance to protest the disenfranchisement of women. Dora Montefiore proposed the formation of the league in 1897. The league’s activities peaked in the decade before World War I but were largely deflated by the onset of that war.

Members saw themselves in a tradition of British tax resistance that included John Hampden. According to one source: “Tax resistance proved to be the longest-lived form of militancy, and the most difficult to prosecute. More than 220 women, mostly middle-class, participated in tax resistance between 1906 and 1918, some continuing to resist through the First World War, despite a general suspension of militancy.”[1]

Contents

[edit] Program

League member and author Beatrice Harridan said in 1913:

The least any woman can do is to refuse to pay taxes, especially the tax on actually earned income. This is certainly the most logical phase of the fight for suffrage. It is a culmination of the Government’s injustice and stupidity to ask that we pay an income tax on income earned by brains, when they are refusing to consider us eligible to vote.

The league was formed three years ago with the slogan: “No vote, no tax.” It is non-partisan—an association of constitutional and militant suffragists, recruited from various suffrage societies for the purpose of resisting taxes.[2]

[edit] Action

In several cases, the government seized and sold at auction items owned by the resisters. The League used these occasions as opportunities for demonstrations and publicity, for instance the “Siege of Montefiore” in 1906:

The house, surrounded by a wall, could be reached only through an arched doorway, which Montefiore and her maid barred against the bailiffs. For six weeks, Montefiore resisted payment of her taxes, addressing the frequent crowds through the upper windows of the house.[1]

[edit] Membership

Among the members were Lilian Hicks, Beatrice Harridan, Dora Montefiore, Flora Annie Steel, Mrs. Israel Zangwill, Mrs. Cobden Saunderson, Mary Russell, Duchess of Bedford, Elizabeth Wilkes, Winifred Patch, Kate Harvey, Sophia Duleep Singh, Charlotte Despard, Clemence Housman, Kate Haslam, Mrs. Darent Harrison, Mrs. Sergent Florence, Mrs. Louis Fagan, Garrett Anderson, and Stanton Coit (a member of “the men’s branch”).

[edit] Women's Tax Resistance in the United States

The women’s suffrage movement in the United States came to adopt some of the same techniques. Anna Howard Shaw said “I hold it is unfair to the women of this country to have taxation without representation, and I have urged [members of the National Woman’s Suffrage Association] to adopt a course of passive resistance like the Quakers instead of aggressive resistance. I say to the Government, ‘you may pick my pocket because you are stronger than I, but I’m not going to turn my pockets wrongside out for you.’ … I believe that the spirit of ‘no taxation without representation’ that resulted in the Revolutionary War is inherent and just as actual in the women of the country as it was then in the men of the country.”[3]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Nym Mayhall, Laura E. The Militant Suffrage Movement: Citizenship and Resistance in Britain, 1860-1930[1]
  2. ^ “Miss Harraden Hit In Eye: She Accuses London Police of Standing By While Roughs Assailed Her” The New York Times 3 May 1913
  3. ^ “Women’s Tax Fight Will Be Passive” New York Times 30 December 1913

[edit] External links