Thousands of people again converged on D.C. over the weekend for the second National Womenโs Day March, a women-led movement that advocates for a range of issues, including ending violence against women, LGBT rights, immigrant rights and environmental justice.
Brightly dressed in hot pink โpussyhatsโ โ a reference to Donald Trumpโs lewd remarks about grabbing women by the genitals in a 2005 recording โ participants began the Jan. 20 march with a rally at Lincoln Memorial and ended at the White House.
โThis could not have come soon enough,โ said Susan Booker, who came from New York to participate. โThis same march is happening in New York as we speak, but I couldnโt stay there to protest. I had to be near the White House, where all of the law makers reside and them know our voices will be heard. The time is now for people of all backgrounds to come together and put away their differences. No more being silent. March for equality, march for justice, march for peace and march for freedom. These ideas didnโt just stop with Martin Luther King Jr. or Franklin D. Roosevelt. We have to make our voices heard and rise up against the antics of Trump and those who donโt support equality.โ
While the issues people are protesting this year were similar to last year, which came a day after Trumpโs inauguration, one thing undeniably different is the record number of women now running for political offices.
Themed โPower to the Polls,โ the high-octane event served as a symbol of female empowerment and encouraged women to vote and to run for office, spearheaded by the new network of women-led grass-roots groups including Run for Something, Our Revolution and Flippable.
To date, there are an unprecedented 35,000 female candidates running for varied political office โ some running for the first time and overwhelmingly Democratic.
Currently there are 390 women planning to run for House seats, higher than at any point in American history, thecut.com reported. Twenty-two of them are non-incumbent Black women (there are currently only 18 Black women in the House). Forty-nine women are likely to be running for the Senate, more than 68 percent higher than the number whoโd announced at the same point in 2014 and at least 79 women are exploring runs for governor in 2018, which will potentially double the record for female candidates set in 1994, according to the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University.
โIf we want to see a real difference in this country, weโre going to have to get out there and vote,โ said D.C. resident Jessica Randolph. โI came to this march last year and what these marches really show me is our power as a people to mobilize. We have to get out there and vote, take public office and really create and impact some major policies. Time is up and the time is now. Letโs get out here and march and then after we march, lets vote and then after we vote, lets run for office.โ
Though the overall theme of the march centered around female voting and public office, other attendees also the event to showcase their displeasure with the president, with multiple signs reading โImpeach Trumpโ visible in the crowd.
โIโm sick of all of this,โ one marcher said. โItโs 2018 and I think itโs absurd that we still have to march for this. โฆ Itโs ridiculous and Iโm insulted. I donโt have a lot to say about this policy or that โ hell, I donโt even always know whatโs going on in the world, because itโs just too much. But I do know that a solution to some of these problems is getting rid of Trump and Iโm here to do my part.โ
Kicking off a yearlong campaign led by the Womenโs March to get more women involved in government, the main event for the protest took place in Las Vegas on Jan. 21.

