What a year it has been. To review all of the strides women have made throughout 2018, I recently sat down with BBC News’ Katty Kay, humanitarian Zainab Salbi and MSNBC’s Kasie Hunt.
We all agreed: Women have made great progress, though serious challenges still lie ahead.
Katty discussed why she believes we saw record numbers of women running for – and winning – political offices this year. “Donald Trump was a big driver here in the United States,” she said, referencing women’s marches and other demonstrations.
And although we now have more than 100 women in Congress, “it’s not enough,” Katty said. “We still have work to do. We’re nowhere near parity. We’re still at only about 20 percent in the Senate.” The key, she said, is for more women to run for office – because we know that when women run, they win at rates as high as men.
And the way women campaign is changing for the better, Kasie added.
This year “women were running as themselves,” she explained. “Historically the model for a woman running was to try to be like the guys. Act like them, and that will help you get elected.”
But the women campaigning in 2018 “threw that playbook out the window,” Kasie said. Mothers brought their kids to campaign stops and suddenly there are more breastfeeding women in Congress, she noted. So conversations are finally being had about facilities in the Capitol — something that was never much of a consideration before.
“I think that’s a huge step forward,” Kasie said. “And I was happy to see that women were able to win in that mold, because perhaps it will help us all break through that idea that if you want to succeed, you have to act like a dude.”
Attitudes are changing in workplaces beyond Capitol Hill, too, particularly in terms of sexual harassment, said Zainab.









