"We are here, not because we are law-breakers; we are here in our efforts to become law-makers"
About this Quote
The intent is pragmatic: to make public opinion see law itself as the issue. Pankhurst doesn’t plead for sympathy; she exposes a rigged system in which half the population is expected to obey rules they had no hand in making. That’s the subtext: legality is not the same as legitimacy. When the franchise is denied, obedience becomes a one-way contract, and "order" starts to look like a mechanism for keeping women in their place.
Context sharpens the blade. Early 20th-century Britain treated suffragette disruption as criminality, not politics, and used prison, force-feeding, and public shaming to enforce that framing. Pankhurst answers with a clean rhetorical reversal: the state can label them offenders, but history will judge them as founders. It’s a threat wrapped in civics. Today’s lawmakers, she implies, are temporary; the definition of "the law" is up for grabs.
Quote Details
| Topic | Equality |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: My Own Story (Emmeline Pankhurst, 1914)
Evidence: That is all I have to say to you, sir. We are here, not because we are law-breakers; we are here in our efforts to become law-makers. (Book II, Chapter III (around printed page 130 in the Gutenberg edition)). Primary source: Emmeline Pankhurst’s own autobiography (published 1914). In the text, she is describing (and quoting) her remarks at Bow Street in London in connection with the October 1908 proceedings (often referenced as the Bow Street Magistrate’s Court / Bow Street police-court matter). This provides a verifiable earliest *print* appearance in her own work (1914). I did not, in this search pass, locate an earlier contemporaneous 1908 stenographic transcript/newspaper printing that can be confidently identified as the first publication; however, the autobiography preserves the line as part of her quoted courtroom statement. The quote is therefore correctly attributed to Pankhurst, and is not merely a later compilation paraphrase. Other candidates (1) European Feminisms, 1700-1950 (Karen M. Offen, 2000) compilation88.2% ... Emmeline Pankhurst , her daughters Christabel and Sylvia , and the Pethick - Lawrences , so - called feminine ...... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Pankhurst, Emmeline. (2026, February 19). We are here, not because we are law-breakers; we are here in our efforts to become law-makers. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-are-here-not-because-we-are-law-breakers-we-167387/
Chicago Style
Pankhurst, Emmeline. "We are here, not because we are law-breakers; we are here in our efforts to become law-makers." FixQuotes. February 19, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-are-here-not-because-we-are-law-breakers-we-167387/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"We are here, not because we are law-breakers; we are here in our efforts to become law-makers." FixQuotes, 19 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-are-here-not-because-we-are-law-breakers-we-167387/. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.





