Europe’s Lawmakers Take on Digital Trolls and Stereotypes for International Women’s Day
The European Parliament is rolling up its sleeves this Thursday for what might be the most 2026 conversation ever: women’s rights versus the internet. Spoiler alert—the internet isn’t winning any popularity contests.
To celebrate International Women’s Day, national and European parliamentarians are gathering in Brussels (and via livestream, because it’s 2026 and pants are optional) to tackle the unholy trinity of online nastiness: stereotypes, disinformation, and gender-based violence. Think of it as a parliamentary intervention for the digital age.
The Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality, led by Spain’s Lina Gálvez, is hosting this interparliamentary meeting with a title so long it needs its own coffee break: “Women’s rights and democracy: combating stereotypes, disinformation and violence in the digital age.” Catchy!
European Parliament President Roberta Metsola will kick things off with a video message—presumably from a location with better lighting than the average Zoom call. The lineup includes journalists who’ve survived the comment section, human rights experts, and even Microsoft’s Digital Safety Manager, who probably has the most stressful inbox in Brussels.
Among the star speakers: Polish journalist Natalia Waloch, Georgian human rights expert Ana Natsvlishvili, and Dr. Silvia Semenzin, who studies digital safety (someone has to). They’ll be joined by Julie Guichard from Microsoft and Carlien Scheele from the European Institute for Gender Equality, proving that fighting online harassment takes a village—or at least a really well-organized committee.
For journalists brave enough to dive deeper, there’s an afternoon seminar specifically about digital violence against women. Because apparently, one session about internet awfulness wasn’t enough for a Thursday.
The timing is perfect: the European Commission is dropping a new EU gender equality strategy this week, following Parliament’s November resolution that essentially said, “Here’s our homework. We did it early.”
So while the rest of us are posting flower emojis and inspirational quotes for International Women’s Day, these folks are actually trying to make the digital world less of a dumpster fire. Someone’s got to do it—might as well be people with official titles and access to decent coffee.
The event runs from 9:00 to 12:30 CET, which is just enough time to address centuries of inequality before lunch. No pressure.









