
Marching Orders is your behind-the-scenes look at how we’re building power at Women’s March. Here’s what we’re up to.
The Epstein Library: 3.5 Million Pages, and Still No Justice
The Epstein files now fill a Manhattan reading room, 3.5 million pages the powerful spent decades hiding. We carried this fight to Zorro Ranch and into the streets, standing with the survivors at the center of it. The government stalled its investigation while Epstein’s enablers kept their freedom. The only person ever convicted for his trafficking network is a woman, while the powerful men he served walked free. More than 150 survivors are still waiting for justice. We fight until that changes. Next stop, Washington, D.C..
Rejecting AI Data Centers in Rural America
The Feminist Flyover Project is fighting the onslaught of data centers in rural communities. Women’s March took a trio of Panhandle women to Austin to tell the Texas Water Development Board what we want: accountability, protected water, and a future that puts people over billionaire profit.
Data centers land hardest on women. When one drains a town’s water, the woman stretches a budget across heat, food, and rent and gets the call when the bill climbs. When thousands of construction workers flood a rural county, sex trafficking follows, and girls pay the price. The men who profit are the same men funding the war on our rights.
If you want to stop AI data center devastation, join the Feminist Flyover Project.
All Roads Lead to the South Voting Rights Rallies
Women’s March turned out from Montgomery to Selma after Louisiana v. Callais gutted the Voting Rights Act, defending Black political representation and majority-Black districts across the South. The freedom to vote is a women’s issue. Black women carry the highest turnout in the country, and the districts on the chopping block are where they turned that turnout into real power. Women won that right with their bodies in 1965. We refuse to hand it back.
Meet Women’s March’s New Volunteer Coordinator, Nicole
Meet Nicole Maldonado, our new Volunteer Coordinator.
Nicole is one of us. Raised in Colombia by her mother and grandmother, she came up learning that you fight for the people you love and the community that raised you. As organizing manager at the ACLU of Oklahoma, she built grassroots campaigns, mobilized volunteers, and forged coalitions taking on immigration, LGBTQ+ rights, policing, and democracy. In 2024 she put her own name on the ballot for the Oklahoma State House to win representation for communities that rarely get it.
Now she is building the program that turns first-time volunteers into the leaders this movement runs on, with clear ways in and real training for anyone ready to work. She is here to bring through the next wave of organizers this country needs. If that’s you, find her and sign up.
We Fund Feminists
Since launching in March 2026, the Feminist Frontline Fund has awarded 12 grants and built 3 partnerships. A movement is only as strong as its roots, so we’re putting money straight into the people doing the real work on the ground, in communities across the country. Power grows from there.
Apply here for a grant, and let’s fund the feminist work in your community.
4 ACTIONS TO TAKE RIGHT NOW
WHAT’S COMING UP
June 24
Banner Drops for Roe
June 24th is the anniversary of the fall of Roe v. Wade. Join us in commemorating it with banner drops around the nation, and demand abortion freedom everywhere.
Saturday, June 27
All of US 250
Join Women’s March and a broad coalition of partners across the country for a nationwide mobilization for truth, equality & freedom ahead of America’s 250th.
July 4
Mobilize with Veterans Against Fascism
On July 4th, save the date to join veterans and military families as we mobilize in Philadelphia and across the country to reject authoritarianism, endless war, and attacks on our freedoms.
Women’s March
| Women’s March is a 501c(4) organization. Your generous support helps us prepare for fights we see coming and those we don’t. Donations are not tax-deductible. If you prefer to make a tax-deductible gift, we encourage you to support the Women’s March Network. Gifts to the Network support our organizing, communications, advocacy, and public education efforts. |
