The resignation of Gary Cohn, President Trump's economic adviser, shook markets already on edge over the sudden prospect of tariffs. The jumpiness underscored Wall Street's distaste for anything that might be seen as brinkmanship.
Hark back to the era that produced International Women鈥檚 Day, which the world observes tomorrow, and you鈥檒l hear familiar echoes.
For one thing, women were on the march. Some 15,000 rallied in New York in 1908 for shorter work hours, better pay 鈥 and the vote. By 1911, International Women鈥檚 Day was born with celebrations in Europe. By 1917, March 8 was its birthday, marking the day Russian women went on a wartime strike for bread, peace 鈥 and the vote.
Fast forward a century. In many countries, women are reminding leaders they can deploy that as they once again fill the streets, last year and this, over issues like pay, gender-based harassment and violence, and equal rights.
That鈥檚 what spurred our series, 鈥Reaching for Equity,鈥 which concludes today. In their reporting, our correspondents found controversial initiatives 鈥 using quotas in politics 鈥 and some counterproductive ones: turning too much of a Western lens on how to move forward. But they also surfaced a common thread: The growing refusal to settle for 鈥渨e鈥檒l get to that later,鈥 or to remain silent about offensive or criminal behavior.
And there鈥檚 a common tone: optimism. That's seen in this year鈥檚 theme, #pressforprogress, which is grounded in the overwhelming that when women do well, the world does well.
Now to our five stories,聽including some that show how a collective sense of good and a willingness to abandon entrenched assumptions strengthens resilience and fosters progress.