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The bill establishing the union was carried through its final stages by substantial majorities.
One of Grattan's main grounds of opposition to the union had been his dread of seeing the political leadership in Ireland pass out of the hands of the landed gentry ; and he prophesied that the time would come when Ireland would send to the united parliament a hundred of the greatest rascals in the kingdom.
Like Flood before him, Grattan had no leaning towards democracy ; and he anticipated that by the removal of the centre of political interest from Ireland the evil of absenteeism would be intensified.

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