She began working at the London
Evening Standard in 1966
Irish Women's Liberation Movement Kenny was one of the founding members of the Irish Women's Liberation Movement. Although the group had no formal structure of officials, she was often seen as the "ring leader" of the group. In March 1971, as part of an action by the IWLM, she walked out of Haddington Road church after the Archbishop of Dublin's pastoral was read out from the pulpit, confirming that "any contraceptive act is always wrong", In a follow-up letter to
The Irish Times she explained her actions by saying
Ian Paisley was right: "Home Rule is
Rome Rule". In 1971, Kenny travelled with
Nell McCafferty,
June Levine and other
Irish feminists on the so-called "
Contraceptive Train" from Dublin to
Belfast to buy condoms, then illegal within the
Republic of Ireland. Later that year she returned to London as Features Editor of the
Evening Standard. to mean sexual intercourse. The
phrase was first used by the magazine
Private Eye on 9 March 1973, but has been widely used since then and was included by the BBC in a list of "The 10 most scandalous euphemisms" in 2013. ==Works==