The essay documents the rise of organized women's political agitation in the United States, recounting conventions led by women and the resolutions they adopted. It argues that adults who obey laws and pay taxes deserve a voice in making them, and it demands suffrage, eligibility for office, removal of male-only legal language, equal property rights in marriage, open access to education and professions, and full partnership in productive labor. These claims are grounded in democratic principles and compared with contemporary struggles against other forms of unjust exclusion, asserting that denying women political rights contradicts stated maxims of justice and representation.