Answer:
George GrenvilleStep-by-step explanation:
In reply to the letter written by a Englishman that said, "Our Colonies must be the biggest Beggars in the World, if such small Duties appear to be intolerable in their Eyes." The colonists coined the term, "No Taxation Without Representation." This term simply refers to the Magna Carta which states that taxes must only be raised on colonies that have representatives in the parliament. Colonists insisted that only they or their representatives could pass taxes that would effect them. But since the colonists didn't have any representatives in the parliament, the british had no right to tax them. The colonists were willing to pay taxes-but only if they were passed by their colonial legislature.