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Free speech is not about comfort but about courage
The Independent
|July 07, 2025
At their best, universities are not echo chambers or political tools: they are places where ideas are tested, debated, challenged and refined, argues former Labour minister Chris Smith (Getty)

The most frightening moment of my political life didn’t come at the despatch box or in a grilling on Newsnight. It came in a packed public meeting in 1983 in London. I had just been elected, and a meeting had been organised by the GLC and others in Finsbury Town Hall in my constituency for Gerry Adams, then newly elected, as a Sinn Fein MP, but not taking his seat. They invited me as the fresh-faced local MP to speak, and I agreed - because I thought we needed to hear all points of view on Ireland at the time.
When it was my turn to speak, I said firmly but simply: “I cannot accept the use of violence for political ends in Northern Ireland.” The reaction was immediate and ferocious, angry booing that went on for minutes. I gripped the edge of the table to steady myself. I have never felt more afraid in public. But I said what I fervently believed. Even in that hostile room, I knew I was doing the right thing: standing up for a principle that mattered. That night stayed with me because it taught me a lesson I've never forgotten: that free speech isn't about comfort. It's about courage. It means saying what's right, not what's easy. That principle applies in politics, in journalism, and perhaps most vitally in universities.
Dit verhaal komt uit de July 07, 2025-editie van The Independent.
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