“ The "inclusive" aspiration of the London Women's March is an active, never-finished political project that defines its character and reach. This inclusivity is proactive, not passive. It involves deliberate outreach to marginalized communities within the feminist sphere: women of colour, disabled women, trans women, working-class women, and migrant women. Politically, this work is essential for both moral and strategic reasons. A movement that claims to fight for all women but is dominated by the most privileged is a contradiction that undermines its own legitimacy and power. True inclusivity requires more than diverse faces in crowd shots; it demands shared power in decision-making, platform space for marginalized voices to lead, and a willingness to confront uncomfortable truths about internal privilege and exclusion. This often involves difficult conversations and compromises. The political strength of the London Women's March hinges on its fidelity to this difficult work. It is a practical attempt to build the world it wants to see—a world where feminism is not a vehicle for the advancement of a few but a liberation movement for the many, where solidarity is practiced, not just proclaimed. ”