The political progress women have made and whats next Cecile Richards

Nearly 100 years ago,

almost today,

most women in the United States
finally won the right to vote.

Now, it would take decades more
for women of color to earn that right,

and we’ve come a long way since,

but I would argue not nearly far enough.

I think what women want today,

not just only in the United States
but around the globe,

is to no longer be an afterthought.

We don’t want to continue to try to,
like, look at the next 100 years

and be granted, grudgingly,
small legal rights and accommodations.

We simply want true and full equality.

I think that women are tired
of retrofitting ourselves

into institutions and governments
that were built by men, for men,

and we’d rather reshape the future
on our own terms.

I believe –

(Applause)

I believe what we need is a women’s
political revolution for full equality

across race, across class,
across gender identity,

across sexual orientation,

and yes, across political labels,

because I believe what binds us
together as women

is so much more profound
than what keeps up apart.

And so I’ve given some thought

about how to build
this women’s political revolution

and that’s what I want
to talk to you about today.

(Cheers)

(Applause)

The good news is that one thing
that hasn’t changed in the last century

is women’s resilience

and our commitment to build
a better life not only for ourselves,

but for generations to come,

because I can’t think of a single woman

who wants her daughter

to have fewer rights
or opportunities than she’s had.

So we know we all stand on the shoulders
of the women who came before us,

and as for myself,

I come from a long line
of tough Texas women.

(Cheers)

My grandparents
lived outside of Waco, Texas,

in the country.

And when my grandmother got pregnant,

of course she was not going
to go to the hospital to deliver,

she was going to have that baby at home.

But when she went into labor,

she called the neighbor woman over
to cook dinner for my grandfather,

because …

I mean, it was unthinkable that he
was going to make supper for himself.

(Laughter)

Been there.

(Laughter)

The neighbor had no experience
with killing a chicken,

and that was what was planned
for dinner that night.

And so as the story goes,

my grandmother,
in the birthing bed, in labor,

hoists herself up on one elbow
and wrings that chicken’s neck, right?

And that is how my mother
came into this world.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

But the amazing thing is,

even though my mother’s own grandmother
could not vote in Texas,

because under Texas law,

“idiots, imbeciles, the insane and women”

were prevented the franchise –

just two generations later,

my mother, Ann Richards, was elected
the first woman governor in her own right

in the state of Texas.

(Applause and cheers)

But you see, when Mom
was coming up in Texas,

there weren’t a lot
of opportunities for women,

and frankly, she spent her entire life
trying to change that.

She used to like to say,

“As women, if you just give
us a chance, we can perform.

After all, Ginger Rogers
did everything Fred Astaire did,

but she did it backwards
and in high heels.”

Right?

And honestly, that’s kind of what women
have been doing for this last century:

despite having very, very little
political power,

we have made enormous progress.

So today in the United States,

100 years after getting the right to vote,

women are almost half the workforce.

And in 40 percent
of families with children,

women are the major breadwinners.

Economists even estimate

that if every single paid working woman
took just one day off of work,

it would cost the United States
21 billion dollars

in gross domestic product.

Now, largely because of Title IX,
which required educational equity,

women are actually now half
the college students in the United States.

We’re half the medical students,
we’re half the law students –

Exactly.

(Applause)

And a fact I absolutely love:

One of the most recent classes of
graduating NASA astronauts was …

What?

For the first time, 50 percent women.

(Applause and cheers)

The point is that women
are really changing industries,

they’re changing business
from the inside out.

But when it comes to government,
it’s another story,

and I actually think a picture
is worth 1000 words.

This is a photograph from 2017
at the White House

when congressional leaders
were called over to put the final details

into the health-care reform bill
that was to go to Congress.

Now, one of the results of this meeting

was that they got rid
of maternity benefits,

which may not be that surprising,

since no one at that table
actually would need maternity benefits.

And unfortunately,
that’s what we’ve learned the hard way

in the US for women.

If we’re not at the table,
we’re on the menu, right?

And we’re simply not at enough tables,

because even though women
are the vast majority of voters

in the United States,

we fall far behind the rest of the world
in political representation.

Recent research is that when
they ranked all the countries,

the United States is 104th
in women’s representation in office.

104th …

Right behind Indonesia.

So is it any big surprise, then,

considering who’s making decisions,

we’re the only developed country
with no paid family leave?

And despite all the research
and improvements we’ve made

in medical care –

and this is really horrifying to me –

the United States now leads the developed
world in maternal mortality rates.

Now, when it comes to equal pay,
we’re not doing a whole lot better.

Women now, on average,
in the United States,

still only make 80 cents
to the dollar that a man makes.

Though if you’re
an African American woman,

it’s 63 cents to the dollar.

And if you’re Latina,
it’s 54 cents to the dollar.

It’s an outrage.

Now, women in the UK, the United Kingdom,

just came up with something
I thought was rather ingenious,

in order to illustrate
the impact of the pay gap.

So, starting November 10
and going through the end of the year,

they simply put an out-of-office
memo on their email

to indicate all the weeks
they were working without pay.

Right?

I think it’s an idea
that actually could catch on.

But imagine if women
actually had political power.

Imagine if we were at the table,
making decisions.

Imagine if we had our own
women’s political party

that instead of putting our issues
to the side as distractions,

made them the top priority.

Well, we know –

research shows
that when women are in office,

they actually act differently than men.

They collaborate more
with their colleagues,

they work across party lines,

and women are much more likely
to support legislation

that improves access to health care,
education, civil rights.

And what we’ve seen in our research
in the United States Congress

is that women sponsor more legislation

and they cosponsor more legislation.

So all the evidence is that when women
actually have the chance to serve,

they make a huge difference
and they get the job done.

So how would it look in the United States
if different people were making decisions?

Well, I firmly believe
if half of Congress could get pregnant,

we would finally quit fighting
about birth control

and Planned Parenthood.

(Applause and cheers)

That would be over.

(Applause)

I also really believe that finally,

businesses might quit
treating pregnancy as a nuisance,

and rather understand it
as a primary medical issue

for millions of American workers.

And I think if more women were in office,

our government would actually prioritize
keeping families together

rather than pulling them apart.

(Applause)

But perhaps most importantly,

I think all of these issues would
no longer be seen as “women’s issues.”

They would just be seen as basic issues
of fairness and equality

that everybody can get behind.

So I think the question is,

what would it take, actually, to build
this women’s political revolution?

The good news is, actually,
it’s already started.

Because women around the globe
are demanding workplaces,

they’re demanding
educational institutions,

they’re demanding governments

where sexism and sexual harassment
and sexual assault are neither accepted

nor tolerated.

Women around the world, as we know,

are raising their hands
and saying, “Me Too,”

and it’s a movement
that’s made so much more powerful

by the fact that women
are standing together across industries,

from domestic workers
to celebrities in Hollywood.

Women are marching, we’re sitting in,

we’re speaking up.

Women are challenging the status quo,

we’re busting old taboos

and yes, we are proudly making trouble.

So, women in Saudi Arabia
are driving for the very first time.

(Applause and cheers)

Women in Iraq are standing in solidarity
with survivors of human trafficking.

And women from El Salvador to Ireland
are fighting for reproductive rights.

And women in Myanmar
are standing up for human rights.

In short, I think the most profound
leadership in the world

isn’t coming from halls of government.

It’s coming from women
at the grassroots all across the globe.

(Applause)

And here in the United States,
women are on fire.

So a recent Kaiser poll reported

that since our last presidential
election in 2016,

one in five Americans have either marched
or taken part in a protest,

and the number one issue
has been women’s rights.

Women are starting new organizations,

they are volunteering on campaigns,

and they’re taking on every issue

from gun-safety reform
to public education.

And women are running for office
in record numbers,

and they are winning.

So – (Laughs)

(Applause)

Women like Lucy McBath from Georgia.

(Applause and cheers)

Lucy lost her son to gun violence,

and it was because of her experience
with the criminal justice system

that she realized just how broken it is,

and she decided to do
something about that.

So she ran for office,

and this January, she’s going to Congress.

OK? Or –

(Applause)

Angie Craig from Minnesota.

(Applause and cheers)

So her congressman had made
such hateful comments about LGBTQ people

that she decided to challenge him.

And you know what? She did, and she won,

and when she goes to Congress in January,

she’ll be the first lesbian mother
serving in the House of Representatives.

(Applause and cheers)

Or –

(Applause)

Or Lauren Underwood from Illinois.

She’s a registered nurse,

and she sees every day the impact
that lack of health care access has

on the community where she lives,

and so she decided to run.

She took on six men in her primary,
she beat them all,

she won the general election,

and when she goes to Congress in January,

she’s going to be the first
African-American woman ever

to serve her district in Washington, D.C.

(Applause and cheers)

So women are recognizing –

this is our moment.

Don’t wait for permission,

don’t wait for your turn.

As the late, great
Shirley Chisholm said –

Shirley Chisholm, the first
African-American woman ever

to go to Congress

and the first woman to run for president
in the Democratic party –

but Shirley Chisholm said,

“If there’s no room for you at the table,
just pull up a folding chair.”

And that’s what women are doing,
all across the country.

I believe women are now the most
important and powerful political force

in the world,

but how do we make sure
that this is not just a moment?

What we need is actually a global movement
for women’s full equality

that is intersectional
and it’s intergenerational,

where no one gets left behind.

And so I have a few ideas
about how we could do that.

Number one: it’s not enough to resist.

It’s not enough to say what we’re against.

It’s time to be loud and proud
about what we are for,

because being for full equality
is a mainstream value

and something that we can get behind.

Because actually, men support
equal pay for women.

Millennials, they support gender equality.

And businesses are increasingly adopting
family-friendly policies,

not just because
it’s the right thing to do,

but because it’s good for their workers.

It’s good for their business.

Number two:

We have to remember,
in the words of Fannie Lou Hamer,

that “nobody’s free
‘til everybody’s free.”

So as I mentioned earlier,

women of color in this country
didn’t even get the right to vote

until much further along
than the rest of us.

But since they did,
they are the most reliable voters,

and women of color are the most
reliable voters for candidates

who support women’s rights,

and we need to follow their lead –

(Applause and cheers)

Because their issues are our issues.

And as white women, we have to do more,

because racism and sexism and homophobia,

these are issues that affect all of us.

Number three: we’ve got to vote
in every single election.

Every election.

And we’ve got to make it easier
for folks to vote,

and we’ve got to make sure
that every single vote is counted, OK?

(Applause and cheers)

Because the barriers that exist
to voting in the United States,

they fall disproportionately on women –

women of color, women with low incomes,

women who are working
and trying to raise a family.

So we need to make it easier
for everyone to vote,

and we can start by making
Election Day a federal holiday

in the United States of America.

(Applause and cheers)

Number four: don’t wait for instructions.

If you see a problem that needs fixing,

I think you’re the one to do it, OK?

So start a new organization,
run for office.

Or maybe it’s as simple as standing up
on the job in support of yourself

or your coworkers.

This is up to all of us.

And number five:
invest in women, all right?

(Applause)

Invest in women as candidates,
as changemakers, as leaders.

Just as an example,

in this last election cycle
in the United States,

women donated 100 million dollars more
to candidates and campaigns

than they had just two years ago,

and a record number of women won.

So just think about that.

(Applause and cheers)

So look, sometimes I think
that the challenges we face,

they seem overwhelming

and they seem like they almost
can never be solved,

but I think the problems
that seem the most intractable

are the ones that are most
important to work on.

And just because it hasn’t been
figured out yet doesn’t mean you won’t.

After all, if women’s work were easy,

someone else would have
already been doing it, right?

(Laughter)

But women around the globe,
they’re on the move,

and they are taking strengths
and inspiration from each other.

They are doing things
they never could have imagined.

So if we could just take
the progress we have made

in joining the workforce,

in joining business,

in joining the educational system,

and actually channel that
into building true political power,

we will reshape this century,

because one of us can be ignored,

two of us can be dismissed,

but together, we’re a movement,

and we’re unstoppable.

Thank you.

(Applause and cheers)

Thank you.

(Applause)

近 100 年前,也

就是今天,

美国大多数女性
终于获得了选举权。

现在,有色人种女性还需要几十年的时间
才能获得这一权利,

从那以后我们已经走了很长一段路,

但我认为还远远不够。

我认为今天女性想要的,

不仅在美国,
而且在全球范围内

,不再是事后诸葛亮。

我们不想继续尝试,
比如,展望未来 100 年

,并勉强地被授予
小的合法权利和便利。

我们只是想要真正和完全的平等。

我认为女性已经厌倦
了将自己改造


由男性为男性建立的机构和政府

,我们宁愿
以自己的方式重塑未来。

我相信——

(掌声)

我相信我们需要一场女性
政治革命,以实现

跨种族、跨阶级、
跨性别认同、

跨性取向

,是的,跨政治标签的完全平等,

因为我相信将我们
作为女性联系在一起的东西

比分开的东西要深刻得多。

所以我已经考虑

了如何建立
这场女性政治革命

,这就是我
今天想和你谈谈的。

(欢呼声)

(掌声

)好消息是,
上个世纪没有改变的一件事

是女性的韧性,

以及我们
不仅为我们自己,也为子孙后代建设更美好生活的

承诺,

因为我无法想象 一个单身

女性希望她的

女儿拥有的权利
或机会比她所拥有的要少。

所以我们知道我们都站在
我们之前的女性的肩膀上

,至于我自己,

我来自一长串
强硬的德克萨斯女性。

(欢呼声)

我的祖父母
住在德克萨斯州韦科

以外的乡下。

当我的祖母怀孕时

,她当然不会
去医院分娩,

她会在家里生那个孩子。

但是临产的时候,

她把邻家的女人叫过来
给我爷爷做饭,

因为……

我的意思是,
他要给自己做晚饭是不可想象的。

(笑声)

去过那里。

(笑声

) 邻居没有
杀鸡的经验

,那是
那天晚上的晚餐计划。

正如故事所说,

我的祖母,
在分娩床上,在分娩时,

用一只手肘把自己抬起来
,拧断那只鸡的脖子,对吧?

我的母亲
就是这样来到这个世界的。

(笑声)

(掌声)

但令人惊奇的是,

即使我母亲的祖母
不能在德克萨斯州投票,

因为根据德克萨斯州的法律,

“白痴、低能者、疯子和女人”

被禁止获得特许经营权——

仅仅两代人之后,

我的母亲安·理查兹(Ann Richards)被选为德克萨斯
州第一位女性州长

(掌声和欢呼)

但是你看,当
妈妈来到德克萨斯时,女性的

机会并不多

,坦率地说,她一生都在
努力改变这一点。

她曾经喜欢说:

“作为女性,只要给
我们一个机会,我们就可以表演。

毕竟,Ginger Rogers
做了 Fred Astaire 所做的一切,

但她
穿高跟鞋做的倒退了。”

对?

老实说,这就是
上个世纪女性一直在做的事情:

尽管我们拥有非常非常少的
政治权力,

但我们已经取得了巨大的进步。

所以今天在美国,

在获得投票权 100 年后,

女性几乎占劳动力的一半。

在 40%
的有孩子的家庭中,

女性是主要的养家糊口者。

经济学家甚至估计

,如果每位带薪职业女性
只请一天假

,美国将损失
210 亿美元

的国内生产总值。

现在,很大程度上是因为
要求教育公平的第九条,

女性现在实际上占
美国大学生的一半。

我们一半是医学生,
一半是法学院学生——

没错。

(掌声)

还有一个我非常喜欢的事实:

最近一批
即将毕业的美国宇航局宇航员是……

什么?

第一次,50% 是女性。

(掌声和欢呼

)关键是
女性真的在改变行业,

她们正在
从内而外地改变商业。

但谈到政府,
那就是另一回事了

,我实际上认为一张
照片值 1000 字。

这是 2017 年在白宫拍摄的照片,

当时国会领导人
被召集,将最终细节

纳入将提交给国会的医疗改革法案

现在,这次会议的结果之一

是他们取消
了生育津贴,

这可能并不令人惊讶,

因为那张桌子上
实际上没有人需要生育津贴。

不幸的是,
这就是我们

在美国为女性学到的艰辛方法。

如果我们不在餐桌旁,
我们就在菜单上,对吧?

而且我们根本没有足够的桌子,

因为即使女性
是美国选民的绝大多数

我们在政治代表方面远远落后于世界其他地区

最近的研究表明,当
他们对所有国家进行排名时

,美国
的女性任职人数排在第 104 位。

第 104 名……

紧随印度尼西亚之后。

那么,

考虑到谁在做决定,

我们是唯一一个
没有带薪探亲假的发达国家,这有什么大不了的吗?

尽管
我们在医疗保健方面进行了所有研究和改进

——这对我来说真的很可怕

——美国现在
在孕产妇死亡率方面领先于发达国家。

现在,当谈到同工同酬时,
我们并没有做得更好。

现在,平均而言,在美国,女性的平均收入

仍仅为
男性的 80 美分。

不过,如果您
是非裔美国女性,

则 63 美分兑 1 美元。

如果你是拉丁裔
,一美元是 54 美分。

这是一种愤慨。

现在,英国,英国的女性

刚刚想出了一个
我认为相当巧妙的东西,

以说明
薪酬差距的影响。

因此,从 11 月 10 日开始一直
到年底,

他们只需在电子邮件中放置一份不在办公室的
备忘录,

以表明
他们无薪工作的所有周数。

对?

我认为这是一个
实际上可以流行的想法。

但是想象一下,如果女性
真的拥有政治权力。

想象一下,如果我们坐在桌旁,
做决定。

想象一下,如果我们有自己的
女性政党

,而不是把我们的问题
放在一边分散注意力,而是

把它们放在首位。

嗯,我们知道——

研究表明
,当女性在职时,

她们的行为实际上与男性不同。

她们更多地
与同事合作,

跨党派工作

,女性更有
可能支持

改善医疗保健、
教育和公民权利的立法。

我们
在美国国会的研究中看到的

是,女性发起了更多的立法

,她们共同发起了更多的立法。

因此,所有证据都表明,当女性
真正有机会服务时,

她们会产生巨大的影响
并完成工作。

那么,
如果不同的人在做决定,在美国会是什么样子呢?

好吧,我坚信,
如果国会中有一半人可以怀孕,

我们最终会放弃
关于节育

和计划生育的斗争。

(掌声和欢呼)

那就结束了。

(掌声)

我也真的相信,最终,

企业可能会不再
将怀孕视为一种麻烦

,而是将其理解
为数百万美国工人的主要医疗问题

而且我认为,如果有更多女性上任,

我们的政府实际上会优先考虑
让家庭团聚

而不是把他们分开。

(掌声)

但也许最重要的是,

我认为所有这些问题都
不再被视为“女性问题”。

它们只会被视为

每个人都可以支持的公平和平等的基本问题。

所以我认为问题是

,实际上要建立
这场女性政治革命需要什么?

好消息是,实际上,
它已经开始了。

因为世界各地的女性都在
要求工作场所,

她们要求
教育机构,

她们要求

政府既不接受也不容忍性别歧视、性骚扰
和性侵犯

正如我们所知,世界各地的女性


举手说“我也是”

,这一
运动变得如此强大

,因为女性
在各个行业站在一起,

从家庭佣工
到好莱坞名人。

妇女们在游行,我们坐在里面,

我们在发声。

女性正在挑战现状,

我们正在打破旧的禁忌

,是的,我们很自豪地制造麻烦。

因此,沙特阿拉伯的女性
第一次开车。

(掌声和欢呼)

伊拉克妇女
与人口贩卖幸存者站在一起。

从萨尔瓦多到爱尔兰的妇女
正在为生殖权利而战。

缅甸妇女
正在捍卫人权。

简而言之,我认为世界上最有影响
力的领导力

并非来自政府部门。


来自全球基层的女性。

(掌声)

而在美国,
女性正在燃烧。

因此,最近的一项凯撒民意调查

显示,自 2016 年上一次总统
大选以来

,五分之一的美国人要么游行
要么参加了抗议活动,

而首要
问题是妇女权利。

女性正在创办新的组织,

她们在竞选活动中做志愿者

,她们正在处理

从枪支安全改革
到公共教育的每一个问题。

女性正在
以创纪录的人数竞选公职,

而且她们正在获胜。

所以——(笑)

(掌声)

像来自乔治亚州的露西麦克巴斯这样的女性。

(掌声和欢呼)

露西的儿子死于枪支暴力

,正是因为她
在刑事司法系统方面的经验

,她才意识到它是多么的破碎

,她决定为此
做点什么。

所以她竞选公职

,今年一月,她要去国会。

好的? 或者——

(掌声)

来自明尼苏达州的安吉·克雷格。

(掌声和欢呼)

所以她的国会议员
对 LGBTQ 人发表了如此可恶的评论

,以至于她决定挑战他。

你知道吗? 她做到了,而且她赢了

,当她在一月份去国会时,

她将成为第一位
在众议院任职的女同性恋母亲。

(掌声和欢呼)

或者——

(掌声)

或者来自伊利诺伊州的劳伦·安德伍德。

她是一名注册护士

,她每天都
看到缺乏医疗保健服务

对她所居住社区的影响

,因此她决定跑步。

她在初选中选拔了六名男子
,她击败了他们,

赢得了大选

,当她在一月份进入国会时,

她将

成为华盛顿特区有史以来第一位为她所在地区服务的非裔美国女性

(掌声 和欢呼声)

所以女性正在认识到——

这是我们的时刻。

不要等待许可,

不要等待轮到你。

正如已故伟大的
雪莉·奇泽姆所说——

雪莉·奇泽姆,第
一位进入国会的非裔美国女性

,也是第一位竞选民主党总统的女性
——

但雪莉·奇泽姆说,

“如果没有你的空间 在餐桌上
,拉起一把折叠椅就行了。”

这就是全国各地的女性正在做的事情

我相信女性现在是世界上最
重要和最强大的政治

力量,

但我们如何
确保这不仅仅是一个时刻?

实际上,我们需要的是一场全球性
的女性完全平等运动

,它是跨代的、跨代的

,没有人掉队。

所以我有一些
关于我们如何做到这一点的想法。

第一:抵抗是不够的。

光说我们反对什么是不够的。

是时候为
我们的目标大声而自豪了,

因为追求完全平等
是一种主流价值观

,也是我们可以支持的东西。

因为实际上,男性
支持女性同工同酬。

千禧一代,他们支持性别平等。

企业越来越多地采用
家庭友好型政策,

不仅因为
这样做是正确的,

而且因为这对他们的员工有好处。

这对他们的生意有好处。

第二:

我们必须记住,
用 Fannie Lou Hamer 的话来说

,“在
每个人都自由之前,没有人是自由的。”

所以正如我之前提到的,

这个国家的有色人种女性
甚至没有投票权,

直到
比我们其他人走得更远。

但既然他们这样做了,
他们是最可靠的选民,

而有色人种女性是支持妇女权利
的候选人最可靠的选民

,我们需要跟随他们的领导——

(掌声和欢呼)

因为他们的问题是我们的问题。

作为白人女性,我们必须做得更多,

因为种族主义、性别歧视和恐同症,

这些都是影响我们所有人的问题。

第三:我们必须
在每次选举中投票。

每次选举。

我们必须让人们更
容易投票

,我们必须
确保每一张选票都被计算在内,好吗?

(掌声和欢呼)

因为
在美国存在投票障碍,

它们不成比例地落在女性身上——

有色人种女性、低收入

女性、正在工作
并试图养家糊口的女性。

因此,我们需要
让每个人都更容易投票

,我们可以从将
选举日定

为美利坚合众国的联邦假日开始。

(掌声和欢呼)

第四:不要等待指示。

如果您发现需要解决的问题,

我认为您就是这样做的人,好吗?

所以开始一个新的组织,
竞选公职。

或者,这就像
站在工作岗位上支持自己

或同事一样简单。

这取决于我们所有人。

第五点:
投资女性,好吗?

(掌声)

投资女性
作为候选人、变革者和领导者。

举个例子,

在美国的最后一个选举周期
中,

女性向候选人和竞选活动捐赠的金额比两年前增加了 1 亿美元

,女性获胜人数创下历史新高。

所以想想吧。

(掌声和欢呼)

所以你看,有时候我
觉得我们面临的挑战,

它们似乎是压倒性的

,它们似乎几乎
永远无法解决,

但我
认为看起来最棘手

的问题是
对工作最重要的问题 在。

仅仅因为它还没有被
弄清楚并不意味着你不会。

毕竟,如果女性的工作很容易,

其他人
早就在做,对吧?

(笑声)

但是世界各地的女性,
她们都在行动

,她们从彼此身上汲取力量
和灵感。

他们正在做
他们从未想象过的事情。

因此,如果我们能够利用
我们

在加入劳动力

、加入商业

、加入教育系统方面取得的进步,

并真正将其
转化为建立真正的政治权力,

我们将重塑本世纪,

因为我们中的一个人可以被忽视,

我们两个人可以被解雇,

但在一起,我们是一个运动

,我们势不可挡。

谢谢你。

(掌声和欢呼)

谢谢。

(掌声)