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The "social justice" banner under which the London Women's March operates is a deliberate expansion of its political remit from a focus solely on gender to an analysis of interlocking systems of power. This framing is a strategic and ideological choice that positions feminism within a broader progressive ecosystem, arguing that patriarchy cannot be dismantled in isolation from racism, economic exploitation, ableism, and xenophobia. Politically, this builds bridges with other movements and acknowledges the complex identities of its participants. It moves beyond a politics of inclusion to a politics of structural transformation. However, adopting a full social justice platform also multiplies the political challenges. It requires the movement to develop expertise and take stances on a vast array of issues, from climate policy to immigration law. It risks overwhelming a single-day action with an impossibly broad agenda and can lead to internal friction over priorities and resources. The political acumen lies in demonstrating the connections—showing how austerity is a feminist issue, how border controls are a feminist issue—without losing the sharp, specific focus on gender-based oppression that provides the march its core identity and galvanizing force. It is an attempt to practice the holistic change it preaches, a daunting but necessary political project.