 I was talking about four fields of action like fighting against poverty, fighting against labor precarious, and valorizing care, unread and stupid in care, and also fighting against gender violence. So if we bear in mind those four fields of action, I would say that we need to put in place or implement new schemes of income transfers, and we need to think if we really want a universal basic income, for example, that would be a way of doing it, but we can think of other types of guaranteed income schemes. We need to think about how we move in our labor market reforms and re-regulating labor market and creating decent jobs, and we need to think, and this is quite key in my humble opinion, we need to think about a radical reduction of the working week, because I think that that would allow us to reduce both employment and care activities. And of course we need to invest, further invest in services, in social services towards children, towards people with disabilities, towards all age people that needs some support. Even if it hasn't translated itself into actual measures or policies, I wanted to highlight the Spanish feminist strike that took place the last 8th March, because it was a success, a complete success. The feminist strike had three fronts of action. The more traditional front of action, it was a labor strike, but it was also a student strike, but also it was a care strike. So women were correct to not perform care activities or domestic tax that day. And also it was a consumer strike, so this strike had three dimensions, so that was a way of stopping the country, which was what the feminist movement wanted to do. The slogan was, si nosotras paramos, se para el mundo, so if we stop the world stops. So I wanted to highlight this success because it was possible, thanks to the conglomeration, let's say of forces and the conglomeration of knowledge that the feminist movement has acquired in the last 4 or 5 years, starting from the resistance against a new abortion bill that the conservative party tried to pass on 2014, but the feminist movement stopped that bill to be passed, so that was a success and the minister of justice had to resign, so it was a great success. And then after that we have seen huge mobilization, a really strong mobilization cycle led by the feminists in the field of gender violence. So from 2014 to no, rather from 2015 to 2017 there have been huge mobilization against gender violence, including sexual violence, and there has been this demand that the states who be responsible of this and should invest more on gender violence, prevention, counseling, training and all of that, so I think that is key that all of this mobilization have been successful, thanks not only to the leadership of the feminist movement, the autonomous feminist movement, but its continuous communication and strategic alliances with other forces in the left, like left parties and the unions. Well, I'm not so optimistic about this, about our chances in international level, but I must admit that here in Europe we have a chance to do this at the European level because we already have networks, we already have the networks in the left and networks within the feminism movement, so maybe we have to try to move our national or state struggles towards Europe, like the European level. And I think that left parties at the European level, we already have the networks, political networks, left parties and also the feminist movement, so I think that left parties have a lot of things to learn from the successes of the feminist movement during the last years and maybe they should be more prone to make alliances and think about alternatives to austerity both from a left, a stand-up and a feminist, all of you.