The women's right, the traditional power that gains strength
The growth of the female right wing is a phenomenon taking hold in various parts of the world, especially the United States. The movement is gaining strength as more women adopt conservative stances and become influential figures within politics, the media and social organizations.
Women on the right have begun to contradict the progressive narrative that associates feminism only with positions of the radical left. These women promote values such as cultural conservatism, protection of the family and skepticism towards gender ideology policies.
The growth is notorious and is evident even in elections. In the last elections, Kamala Harris held a lead of only 10 points over President-elect Donald Trump (54% vs 44%).
And despite being a woman, Harris' lead did not reach that obtained in 2020 by President Joe Biden, who beat Trump by 15 points, nor that of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2016, who obtained a 13-point difference.
No to abortion, no to gender ideology....
Right-wing women strongly defend conservative policies, advocating restrictions on issues such as abortion, promoting economic freedom, opposing gender ideology, and the imposition of this ideology on minors. They also oppose the biologically unbalanced "equality" between men and women imposed by the left (men in women's sports, in women's bathrooms, among others).
Globally, figures such as Giorgia Meloni -current Prime Minister of Italy- defend traditional values, national sovereignty, an economic model that protects small and medium-sized enterprises, policies to promote the birth rate in Italy and reforms to reduce bureaucracy. Her motto is "God, country and family."
In the United Kingdom, Kemi Badenoch, the leader of the English Conservative Party, is a conservative politician who defends traditional values. Her defense of the free market, free speech and patriotism resonate especially with voters who reject progressive policies.
María Corina Machado is another example of a politician who has become a reference worldwide for her strong fight against the Venezuelan dictatorial regime.Machado echoes her support for democracy and individual freedom, advocating a market economy with less state control, privatizing public companies and eliminating exchange and price controls.
In the United States, the female right is gaining strength
In the U.S., Megyn Kelly is a journalist known by the population for her conservative stance. For years, she worked at Fox News and has always been critical of gender and race policies promoted by progressive sectors, especially on issues such as children's education and the promotion of gender ideology in schools. Just as she defends "gender equality," she is critical of policies that, according to her, blur traditional family roles or promote divisions between men and women.
Women such as Elise Stefanik and Kristi Noem - prominent figures in the Republican Party - are another example, known for their conservative stances on social, economic and national policy issues.
Stefanik - recently appointed by President-elect Donald Trump as U.N. ambassador - advocates cutting taxes and promoting policies that benefit small businesses and working families. On the other hand, she is known to have criticized progressive programs in public schools, such as critical race theory, and promoted educational policies that respect "traditional family values."
Likewise, Noem (governor of South Dakota and Trump appointee to head the Department of Homeland Security) is an active advocate of anti-abortion policies. She also defends her anti-globalist stance.
Riley Gaines (a famous swimmer advocate for women's rights versus trans men in women's sports) has used her influence to mobilize the grassroots and challenge positions that ensure that men and women are biologically equal. She publicly argues the disadvantages of a woman because of her biological functions (less strength, less speed), which do not compare to those of an equally trained man.
Another of those present at VOZ is Catalina Stubbe, director of Moms for Liberty(an organization that advocates against school studies that indoctrinate with LGBT ideology), who, in the podcast "La Voz de Karina Mariani," expressed concern about the dangers of indoctrination in schools and about how this woke and sexualized gender ideology is entering the minds of the little ones due to the teaching in educational centers:
"My problem is that they are pushing that propaganda to children and they want to change the idea of children that they want to normalize that homosexuality and that moresexualized thinking in children."