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Women are fighting for more than political power in Senegal’s presidential election

It’s presidential campaign season in Senegal and the candidates’ faces beam down at voters from posters tacked to light poles and plastered on billboards all over Dakar. There are 18 people running, and at times, their images seem to blend together: a sea of older men in dark, dour suits. But one face stands out.  

Anta Babacar Ngom cuts a strikingly different figure. For one thing, at 40 years old she’s a generation younger than many of the other candidates. For another, she’s a she.

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Women are playing an increasingly forceful role in Senegalese politics. As the country prepares to vote in its presidential election Sunday, women are making their voices heard as candidates, voters, and protesters.

Although no one expects Ms. Ngom to become the next president, her presence in the race speaks to the increasingly forceful role of women in the politics of Senegal, which has one of the highest percentages of female legislators in the world.

Indeed, women led in many ways in the run-up to Sunday’s controversial vote. They participated in mass protests against a government attempt to postpone the election, and against the arrest of opposition candidates. Prominent political leaders like Aminata Touré pushed the current president, Macky Sall, to step down at the end of his term and hold elections as promised. And then there is Ms. Ngom, the CEO of a poultry company who is the first female presidential candidate since 2012.

It’s presidential campaign season in Senegal’s capital city and all over town the candidates’ faces beam down at voters from posters tacked to light poles and plastered on billboards. Eighteen people are running, and at times, their images seem to blend together: a sea of older men in dark, dour suits. But one face stands out.

In her pastel blue headwrap and green dress, Anta Babacar Ngom cuts a strikingly different figure. For one thing, at 40 years old she’s a generation younger than many of the other candidates. For another, she’s a she.

Although no one expects Ms. Ngom to become the next president, her presence in the race speaks to the increasingly forceful role of women in the politics of Senegal, which has one of the highest percentages of female legislators in the world.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Women are playing an increasingly forceful role in Senegalese politics. As the country prepares to vote in its presidential election Sunday, women are making their voices heard as candidates, voters, and protesters.

“Leadership is about fighting your way through,” says Aminata Touré, who served as Senegal’s appointed prime minister from 2013 to 2014. 

Indeed, in the run-up to Sunday’s controversial vote, women were often at the forefront of protests against the government’s attempt to postpone the election. Prominent political leaders like Ms. Touré pushed the current president, Macky Sall, to step down at the end of his term and hold elections as promised. Ms. Ngom was herself briefly detained at one such demonstration. Prior to the election campaign, she was best known as the CEO of a poultry company who made waves in 2019 when she opened Senegal’s first KFC – with an all-female staff.

Seeing women break the mold in these ways has an importance that “goes beyond politics,” Ms. Touré says. 

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