2025 Annual Event
Our 2025 Annual Event was held on June 3rd at the Conrad in Washington, DC. Bringing together partners, supporters, sponsors, and advocates, the evening celebrated the ongoing work of the National Partnership and those who stand alongside us with the theme: legacy of resilience, protecting our progress, setting a vision for the future.

Event Highlights

Event Videos

Event Highlights

Event Videos

Distinguished Honorees

Bishop Leah Daughtry, organizer-activist, political strategist, author and theologian

Bishop Leah Daughtry

Organizer-activist, political strategist, author and theologian

Watch her speech

M’Evie Mead, Director of Strategic Partnerships with Missouri Jobs with Justice

M'Evie Mead

Director of Strategic Partnerships with Missouri Jobs with Justice

Watch her speech

Joy-Ann Reid, award-winning journalist, author, documentary film producer and social and political commentator

Joy-Ann Reid

Award-winning journalist, author, documentary film producer and social and political commentator

Watch her speech

Julie Su, former U.S. Secretary of Labor

Julie Su

Former U.S. Secretary of Labor

Watch her speech

Special Video Greeting

U.S. Senator Cory Booker

Senator Cory Booker

U.S. Senator

Watch his message

Event Photos

NPWF President Jocelyn Frye speaking at a podium on stage at the 2025 Annual Event in front of an audience of supporters and partners
2025 Annual Event Honorees and NPWF leadership standing on the “red carpet:” (left to right) Julie Su, Joy-Ann Reid, Jocelyn Frye, Shreya Jani, Bishop Leah Daughtry, and M’Evie Mead
Jocelyn Frye and 2025 Annual Event Honoree Joy-Ann Reid holding her award on stage
2025 Annual Event Honoree Bishop Leah Daughtry standing on stage in front of a podium with a sign featuring the NPWF logo
2025 Annual Event Honoree M’Evie Mead standing with two relatives before accepting her award
2025 Annual Event Honoree Julie Su standing with a group of guests in front of the NPWF “Vision Wall”
A group of guests enjoying a lively conversation at the 2025 Annual Event
A group of guests posing for a photo on the “red carpet” at the 2025 Annual Event
2024 Annual Event Honoree Theresa Younger with two guests at the 2025 Annual Event
NPWF staff and guests posing for a “groupie” photo at the 2025 Annual Event
Two guests sharing their vision statements for a more equitable future at the 2025 Annual Event
NPWF staff wrapping up a successful and memorable 2025 Annual Event

See more photos on Facebook.

Event Quotes

The National Partnership for Women & Families “was built precisely for moments like this … The measure of our success is not just about wins and losses; it’s about the fact that we are still here. We are still fighting. We are still pushing, and we’ll continue to do so as long as there’s work that remains to be done … It is our resilience, our fortitude, our determination, our ability to play the long game. That’s what sets us apart organizationally and collectively.

…We need to be loud, clear, and bold about an affirmative agenda for change that is unafraid of inclusion, values the diversity we bring, believes we all deserve to be healthy and to have actual health care. We need to counter the fear with hope, to defeat the politics of division with the power of our solidarity.”

– Jocelyn Frye, President, National Partnership for Women & Families

“… We understand this [repressive] response not as a rebuke but as an affirmation to what happens when you build power. We started preparing for the defense campaign and raising resources for it before we even knew we were going to win these [minimum wage, paid sick days, and abortion rights] measures. While we still have lots and lots of work to do, that orientation toward power building is why I stand before you tonight not dejected. I am proud and I am energized because we are ready to build more power.”

– M’Evie Mead, Director of Strategic Partnerships, Missouri Jobs with Justice

“There’s so much work ahead. The challenges are towering. The days are difficult. As Dr. King said, we’ve had difficult days, but we have had them before. We answered with the women’s movement, with the Women’s March, with Stonewall, with the farm workers movement, the civil rights movement. We’ve answered and met the moment at every turn, because we know that our responsibility is not just for ourselves, but for those who come behind us.

We look forward to continuing to stand with the Partnership as we work together every day to remember our calling, to remember our work, to fight for all the women and all the families. To serve the least, the last, and the lost, the left out, the locked out, and the left behind. To be their voice, to be their hope, to be their strength, to be their light. To fight with them with courage, conviction, and compassion – until the promise of America is the practice of America.”

– Bishop Leah Daughtry, organizer-activist, political strategist, author and theologian

“If making sure that women get good jobs, jobs that we’ve not been able to have before, is radical, then let’s be radical. If it’s radical to ensure a just day’s pay for a hard day’s work and equal pay, then let’s be radical. If it’s radical to make caregiving available, caregivers valued, and to protect Black mothers before, during, and after childbirth, then give me radical. If it’s radical to teach our children our full history, then we should definitely be radical. If it’s radical to say that working people should not have to demand but should be able to expect a job with security and dignity, to be able to go to the doctor when they’re sick without breaking the bank, to be able to retire with dignity and a pension at the end of work, and that families can enjoy time together because it doesn’t take multiple jobs to build a life, then let’s be as radical as we can be. Let’s join the National Partnership for all of their work in breathing life into ideas like diversity, inclusion, equity, by using radical organizing and radical solidarity.”

– Julie Su, former U.S. Secretary of Labor

“[Attacks on DEI by the current administration] is not a reason to stand back. It’s a reason to lean forward. They think that by erasing our names from websites that the government controls that they erase our history. They do not. We still have our oral history. We can still speak, and while we can still speak, we can still tell our stories. They cannot deplatform us out of our rights. They cannot silence our rights away unless we let them, so what I would call upon us to do is … Fight like hell for the things that you deserve, and you deserve diversity, equity, and inclusion. If they don’t like it, some folks just gonna have to be mad.”

– Joy-Ann Reid, award-winning journalist, author, documentary film producer and social and political commentator

Our Generous Supporters

Champion

Clifford Chance logo
Lush logo
Munger Tolles Olson logo
Omidyar Network logo

Advocate
AARP | Airbnb | Microsoft | Service Employees International Union

Benefactor
AFL-CIO | AFSCME | Democracy Forward | EMILYs List | Institute for Women’s Policy Research | Jenna Skinner Scanlan | National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association | National Health Law Program | NCBCP: Black Women’s Roundtable | NVG LLC | Paid Leave for All | Southern Poverty Law Center | Tonya Robinson and Paul & Keira Oostburg | United Food & Commercial Workers International Union

Patron
Brett Brenner and Brian Reid | The Brownell Family | Catholics for Choice | Instacart | Lawyer’s Committee for Civil Rights Under Law | National Abortion Federation | National Fair Housing Alliance | National Women’s Law Center | NUBOXX | Rachel Snider

Signature Cocktail Sponsor

Tito's logo

Event Quotes

The National Partnership for Women & Families “was built precisely for moments like this … The measure of our success is not just about wins and losses; it’s about the fact that we are still here. We are still fighting. We are still pushing, and we’ll continue to do so as long as there’s work that remains to be done … It is our resilience, our fortitude, our determination, our ability to play the long game. That’s what sets us apart organizationally and collectively.

…We need to be loud, clear, and bold about an affirmative agenda for change that is unafraid of inclusion, values the diversity we bring, believes we all deserve to be healthy and to have actual health care. We need to counter the fear with hope, to defeat the politics of division with the power of our solidarity.”

– Jocelyn Frye, President, National Partnership for Women & Families

“… We understand this [repressive] response not as a rebuke but as an affirmation to what happens when you build power. We started preparing for the defense campaign and raising resources for it before we even knew we were going to win these [minimum wage, paid sick days, and abortion rights] measures. While we still have lots and lots of work to do, that orientation toward power building is why I stand before you tonight not dejected. I am proud and I am energized because we are ready to build more power.”

– M’Evie Mead, Director of Strategic Partnerships, Missouri Jobs with Justice

“There’s so much work ahead. The challenges are towering. The days are difficult. As Dr. King said, we’ve had difficult days, but we have had them before. We answered with the women’s movement, with the Women’s March, with Stonewall, with the farm workers movement, the civil rights movement. We’ve answered and met the moment at every turn, because we know that our responsibility is not just for ourselves, but for those who come behind us.

We look forward to continuing to stand with the Partnership as we work together every day to remember our calling, to remember our work, to fight for all the women and all the families. To serve the least, the last, and the lost, the left out, the locked out, and the left behind. To be their voice, to be their hope, to be their strength, to be their light. To fight with them with courage, conviction, and compassion – until the promise of America is the practice of America.”

– Bishop Leah Daughtry, organizer-activist, political strategist, author and theologian

“If making sure that women get good jobs, jobs that we’ve not been able to have before, is radical, then let’s be radical. If it’s radical to ensure a just day’s pay for a hard day’s work and equal pay, then let’s be radical. If it’s radical to make caregiving available, caregivers valued, and to protect Black mothers before, during, and after childbirth, then give me radical. If it’s radical to teach our children our full history, then we should definitely be radical. If it’s radical to say that working people should not have to demand but should be able to expect a job with security and dignity, to be able to go to the doctor when they’re sick without breaking the bank, to be able to retire with dignity and a pension at the end of work, and that families can enjoy time together because it doesn’t take multiple jobs to build a life, then let’s be as radical as we can be. Let’s join the National Partnership for all of their work in breathing life into ideas like diversity, inclusion, equity, by using radical organizing and radical solidarity.”

– Julie Su, former U.S. Secretary of Labor

“[Attacks on DEI by the current administration] is not a reason to stand back. It’s a reason to lean forward. They think that by erasing our names from websites that the government controls that they erase our history. They do not. We still have our oral history. We can still speak, and while we can still speak, we can still tell our stories. They cannot deplatform us out of our rights. They cannot silence our rights away unless we let them, so what I would call upon us to do is … Fight like hell for the things that you deserve, and you deserve diversity, equity, and inclusion. If they don’t like it, some folks just gonna have to be mad.”

– Joy-Ann Reid, award-winning journalist, author, documentary film producer and social and political commentator

Event Sponsors

Champion

Clifford Chance logo
Lush logo
Munger Tolles Olson logo
Omidyar Network logo

Advocate
AARP | Airbnb | Microsoft | Service Employees International Union

Benefactor
AFL-CIO | AFSCME | Democracy Forward | EMILYs List | Institute for Women’s Policy Research | Jenna Skinner Scanlan | National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association | National Health Law Program | NCBCP: Black Women’s Roundtable | NVG LLC | Paid Leave for All | Southern Poverty Law Center | Tonya Robinson and Paul & Keira Oostburg | United Food & Commercial Workers International Union

Patron
Brett Brenner and Brian Reid | The Brownell Family | Catholics for Choice | Instacart | Lawyer’s Committee for Civil Rights Under Law | National Abortion Federation | National Fair Housing Alliance | National Women’s Law Center | NUBOXX | Rachel Snider

Signature Cocktail Sponsor

Tito's logo

National Partnership for Women and Families 55th anniversary logo