“I want a better world for my child.” Youth lead the way in 2020 Raleigh Women's March
Barbee said that's something she wanted her daughter to see and be a part of.
"She's almost four; she's just about to start getting it and it's time to put actions into words," Barbee said. "I want her to grow up in a country whose leaders respect her as a person. We're fighting to protect her future. I want a better world for my child."
On a brisk and sunny Sunday afternoon, thousands took to the streets of downtown for the Raleigh Women's March. Now in its fourth year, the local demonstration is one of the city's largest gatherings, with the blocks around the statehouse packed with activists pushing for equal rights.
The first Raleigh Women's March was held in 2017 as a local offshoot of a worldwide demonstration following the inauguration of President
This year's march falls on what to many feels like a political precipice as the country prepares for the 2020 presidential election.. More than a week ago,
The
In
Most of Sunday's event took place in the grassy center of
Longtime activist and march organizer
"I think you see a lot of young women who are anxious," Brannon said at a march event earlier in the week. "They're willing and ready and want to connect to their world. They're very frustrated by coming out of high school and entering college, entering the workplace and seeing that we're still facing many of the things they read about in their US History classes."
"We're young women, we're millennials and we just want equal rights," Alexander said. "We don't want to take anything from anyone else, we just want to be treated the same way."
Marching in a long white dress commemorating the efforts of suffragettes in wining the right to vote for women,
"You could see at some of the levels (of teaching), who got promoted, who got the higher jobs, even though you had more experience, because they were male," Nicholas said.
"Over the years, I think we've grown somewhat complacent," Howard said. "I'm hopeful in the younger generation. They bring a new energy, new light and momentum."
"I'm very concerned to see my own daughter potentially have less right to control her reproductive rights than I had,"
Last year Lizzie and John marched together and this year they marched as a family, with Lizzie saying she became more political after the 2016 election.
"If you don't tell them you want something they won't know; that's why you have to fight for it,"
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