It was an historic night for female candidates in this past week's midterm elections, taking a record number of seats in the House of Representatives and also gaining important offices on the state level in California. These gains come after a year of energetic campaigning and organizing among women candidates, arguably encouraged to a large extent by the #MeToo movement--taking on sexual harassment and abuse. It was just over a year ago that an open letter, signed by many women in politics, uncovered a culture of rampant abuse in California's capitol. It launched a movement that came to be the We Said Enough campaign, and over the last year we've seen not only a handful of high profile resignations by lawmakers accused of sexual misconduct but also some serious reform efforts aimed at beefing up investigations into abuse allegations. On this edition of In Depth, guest host Keith Menconi speaks to some of the key leaders of We Said Enough, Adama Iwu and Christine Pelosi, to hear from them what they believe the movement has achieved so far and also now that the midterms have come and gone, what sorts of changes we should expect to see in politics with more women in power. Ms. Iwu is co-founder and president of We Said Enough, and was featured on the cover of Time Magazine after the letter was published. "As soon as the letter came out, Iwu said, "I think those of who had signed it realized immediately what this was and mostly because reporters from all over the world started reaching out to those of us in the core group but also every single woman who signed that letter was getting multiple calls from reporters asking you know, who, what, where, when and why and what did they know and when did they know it and that type of thing. And that was a lot to deal with. And we were clear that we didn't want to name names, that wasn't what we wanted. We weren't after one or two people you know just kind of going away. We really wanted wholesale culture change and when legislators began resigning I think that was when we really realized that this was real. And we also realized that it was real because we were seeing this happening in other places around the country as well." "It was a tremendous victory for women activists all over the country who for two years have been building a message around protecting healthcare, about defending women's rights and about advancing our values," said Pelosi of Tuesday's election results. She is legal counsel for We Said Enough and Democratic Women's Caucus Chair. "Some of those women went on to become candidates, first time candidates, which was very exciting to see."