In February 1765, Grenville escalated his revenue program with the Stamp Act, precipitating a major conflict between Britain and the colonies over Parliament’s right to tax. The Stamp Act imposed a tax on all paper used for official documents—
English tradition held that taxes were a gift of the people to their monarch, granted by the people’s representatives. This view of taxes as a freely given gift preserved an essential concept of English political theory: the idea that citizens have the liberty to enjoy and use their property without fear of confiscation. The king could not demand taxes; only the House of Commons could grant it. Grenville agreed with the notion of taxation by consent, but he argued that the colonists were already “virtually” represented in Parliament. The House of Commons, he insisted, represented all British subjects, wherever they were.
Colonial leaders emphatically rejected this view, arguing that virtual representation could not withstand the stretch across the Atlantic. Colonists willingly paid local and provincial taxes, levied by their town, county, or colonial assemblies, to fund government administrative expenses and shared necessities like local roads, schools, and poor relief. In contrast, the stamp tax was a clear departure as a fee-