Politics

What This Moment Requires of Us: Women, Voting Rights and the Battle for Representation

Weekend Reading on Women’s Representation is a compilation of stories about women’s representation in politics, on boards, in sports and entertainment, in judicial offices and in the private sector in the U.S. and around the world—with a little gardening and goodwill mixed in for refreshment!

This Week

Milestones: 

Portrait of Rosa Parks, painted by Melanie Humble.

Birthdays for notable women: 


What Does This Moment Require of Us?

People rally to demand the return of the Abigail Adams statue back to Quincy City Hall in Quincy, Mass., on March 26, 2022. The city is planning to put the original statue of Abigail Adams with young John Quincy at Merrymount Park across from the stadium. But rallygoers thought Abigail Adams deserves a more prominent location worthy of her contribution to history. (Erin Clark / The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

In recent weeks, I have found myself asking the same question again and again: What does this moment require of us?

This week, as part of Gender on the Ballot’s New Year Resolution Series, we shared ours, and I want to start here, because it sits at the heart of everything we’re building at RepresentWomen this year:

“In 2026, as we mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, RepresentWomen resolves to honor Abigail Adams’ call to ‘remember the ladies’ by designing a democracy that finally harnesses women’s full participation and power. Women make up half of the population, yet remain underrepresented in elected office — a gap that persists when electoral rules fail to fully reflect the diversity and collaboration voters want. This year, we commit to addressing the barriers women face by expanding ranked-choice voting and supporting legislative rule changes that translate women’s leadership into lasting representation.”

That resolution isn’t symbolic. It’s personal, practical, and it’s already shaping how we show up this year; in the research we’re publishing, the partnerships we’re deepening, and the reforms we’re working to advance. It’s guiding how we think about power, not as something women are granted someday, but as something women are already exercising when the rules finally allow it.

One of the clearest ways we live out that commitment is by creating spaces where women’s expertise isn’t sidelined or qualified, but centered.

Six years ago, I started planning what would become our annual Democracy Solutions Summit after realizing that far too many conversations about democracy were happening without women. I was attending panels where the expertise was real, and the stakes were high, yet the voices were overwhelmingly male. I kept thinking about how different those conversations might look and how much stronger our democracy could be if women were consistently trusted to lead them. So we created one.

What began as a small but intentional space has grown into an annual gathering of women leaders, organizers, philanthropists, researchers, and reformers from across the country—and around the globe. Each year, the conversations have deepened, our Women Experts in Democracy Directory has grown, the urgency has sharpened, and the stakes have become clearer. This isn’t just a convening; it’s a place where women come together to share what’s working, challenge what isn’t, and imagine what democracy could look like if it truly reflected our communities.

Now, as we enter our fifth year, this work feels more urgent than ever. As February begins and we mark Black History Month, I’m reminded that the fight for a more representative democracy has always been carried forward by women who refused to accept exclusion as inevitable. Women whose leadership shaped the systems we rely on today, even when those systems failed to fully recognize their power. Their voices—past and present—continue to guide this work.

That lineage is part of what we’ll be honoring at this year’s Democracy Solutions Summit. Our 2026 gathering is grounded in the theme Women’s Power by Design, and over three days, we’ll explore Where We’ve BeenWhere We Are, and Where We’re Going. From the women who laid the groundwork for reform to those organizing and governing today to the leaders imagining what comes next, this Summit is about understanding how power has been built—and how it can be redesigned to finally reflect the people it serves.

On Day 1, as we reflect on Where We’ve Been, we’ll be joined by April Albright of Black Voters Matter. Her work, and the work of so many Black women organizers, is a powerful reminder that progress is never accidental. It is shaped by people who show up, who organize, and who insist on being counted, again and again.

This is why the Democracy Solutions Summit matters. Not as a moment, but as a practice. A place to listen, to learn, to challenge our assumptions, and to carry forward the lessons of those who came before us while equipping today’s leaders with the tools they need to shape what comes next.