The strike featured two coordinated national moments: at 11:00 AM, the call for strike was read simultaneously across Swiss cities, and at 3:24 PM, women were invited to leave their workplaces or homes. The 3:24 PM timing symbolically represented when women effectively stop being paid during an eight-hour workday, based on the wage gap calculated by federal statistics. In major cities, demonstrations took various forms. In
Bern, members of parliament interrupted their session for 15 minutes in symbolic support, with many joining protesters in the Federal Square. Protesters wore purple clothing and carried signs with the female symbol ♀ containing a raised fist. Some controversial symbols were also displayed, including representations of female anatomy, which organizers described as powerful symbols of
femininity. •
Basel: 40,000 people •
Bern: 50,000 people •
Geneva: 20,000 (police estimate) to 75,000 (algorithm-based count by EPFL) •
Lausanne: 40,000 (police) to 60,000 (organizers) •
Zurich: 160,000 (revised police estimate) •
Smaller cities: Aarau (3,000), Delémont (4,000), Fribourg (12,000), Neuchâtel (5,000), Sion (12,000), St. Gallen (4,000) File:Greve_Femmes_Bienne_14_Juin_2019_55.jpg|Demonstration in
Biel/Bienne, with women holding up signs. == Influence ==