In 1842 Duffy had already allied himself with
James Godkin who had abandoned a Bible mission to campaign for the rights of the Catholic tenants he had been tasked with bringing into the Protestant fold. He now looked to McKnight and to Crawford. Together they called a convention in Dublin to which upwards of forty members of Parliament, and about two hundred Catholic and Presbyterian clergymen responded. With McKnight presiding, the assembled formed the all-Ireland
Tenant Right League dedicating to securing concession of his "
three F's’". In the elections of November 1852, what he had optimistically called the "League of North and South" helped return Duffy (for
New Ross) and 47 other pledged
MPs to
Westminster. But despite the efforts of MacKnight in Derry, of Crawford in
County Down, of the Rev.
David Bell in
County Monaghan and of others across the province, only one
(William Kirk for
Newry) was returned from Ulster. In the north they had contended with the opposition, sometimes violent, of the
Orange Order, In November 1852,
Lord Derby's short-lived Conservative government introduced a land bill to compensate Irish tenants on eviction for improvements they had made to the land. The bill passed in the
House of Commons in 1853 and 1854, but failed win consent of the landed grandees in the
House of Lords. (In the
Banner, MacKnight, who had had a low opinion of the bill, nonetheless welcomed it as a first departure in
the Commons from the principle that anything beyond the rights of the landlord is a question of private bargain). In the South,
Archbishop Cullen approved the Catholic tenant-right MPs breaking their pledge of independent opposition and accepting positions in a new Whig administration. Significantly in a League debate in February 1853 MacKnight, wary of any sign of Irish separatism, did not support Duffy in condemning these desertions. Rather, he protested the increasingly strident nationalism of southern League spokesman and supporters. He and his family emigrated to Australia. David Bell left for England where in 1864 he was inducted by
Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa into the Irish Republican Brotherhood|Irish Republican ["Fenian"] Brotherhood. == Continued commitment to agrarian reform ==