Women participating in a feminist demonstration wearing purple jerseys and holding purple signs while showing expressions of joy and determination
URUGUAY

Inmujeres requests a 40% budget increase for feminist NGOs

The National Institute for Women, led by Mónica Xavier, intends to continue funding radical feminism

In Uruguay, feminism is a multimillion-dollar business financed with taxpayers' money

Feminist Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), all linked to the left, promote hatred toward men, the destruction of the family, and the enrichment of those who lead them.

The leaders of these NGOs fill their pockets with public money.

For several years in Uruguay, countless feminist NGOs have emerged that, under the lie of "fighting for equality" and "supporting women who suffer violence," have set up a shady, dirty, and darkbusiness that all Uruguayans pay for with their taxes.

Woman with a purple scarf that says Ni Una Menos and sunglasses raising her fist during a feminist demonstration
Feminist march | La Derecha Diario

Flourishing of the business

Since 2005, with the arrival of Vázquez to the government for the first time, Frente Amplio strongly promoted the flourishing of feminist organizations under the lie that they were necessary to end the violence that women supposedly suffer.

Feminist NGOs grew like mushrooms and began to sign agreements with state agencies. 

These agencies inject public money into the NGOs to help them in their supposed "fight for gender equality" and "against the violence suffered by women." 

All this hides a dark network that is a dirty and corruptbusiness, where, with taxpayers' money, a group of radical feminists, those who run the NGOs, fill their pockets.

Between 2005 and 2020, during the three governments of Frente Amplio, hundreds of millions of dollars ended up in the pockets of those who run these NGOs.

Between 2020 and 2025, under the government of the Republican Coalition, the situation did not change much and with public money dozens of feminist organizations continued to be financed, where state agencies inject money through agreements signed with the NGOs.

Group of women holding a banner at a demonstration that reads: Women, community kitchens, popular soup kitchens, dissidents against hunger and for life, in a square surrounded by buildings and palm trees.
Feminist march in Montevideo | La Derecha Diario

Currently, under the government of Yamandú Orsi, the corrupt scheme is the same; feminist organizations disguised as defenders of women's rights, claiming to want to eradicate gender violence, are financed with everyone's money.

Inmujeres is key in the corrupt scheme

The director of the National Institute for Women, an agency belonging to MIDES headed by the socialist Gonzalo Civila, stated bluntly that she intends for taxpayers' taxes to increase the Institute's budget by 40%.

The idea is to finance these radical feminist NGOs, whose only intention is to promote hatred toward all men, attack the family, and fatten the pockets of the ladies who run these NGOs.

There are several leaders of feminist NGOs who, in just a few months, went from traveling by bus to owning a brand-new car and a house in a seaside resort on the coast.

They were more concerned with their personal assets than with the supposed "fight for equality for everyone."

The "fight against gender violence" gave way to the purchase of a brand-new car and a house in Piriápolis. 

More taxpayers' money

In April, the director of Inmujeres, Mónica Xavier, requested in Parliament a 40% increase in the agency's budget. 

Xavier, from the SocialistParty, argued that it is necessary to "make the baseline honest" because current resources are not enough to meet the objectives, especially in addressing "gender violence."

Among the reasons, she highlighted the lack of sufficient services in the interior of the country and the need to increase quotas for the protection of women, including trafficking cases, where Uruguay is at "zero quota."

All a gigantic lie.

The purpose is always the same: to continue feeding the gigantic machinery of feminist NGOs, which, although they operate as civil society organizations, are financed with taxpayers' money.

Short-haired, gray-haired woman with glasses and a yellow blouse sitting in a bright indoor setting
Socialist Mónica Xavier | La Derecha Diario

Business for a few

Meanwhile, in Uruguay, there are all kinds of shortages at every level, feminists want Uruguayans to keep paying taxes to support their vices and privileges.

Meanwhile, honest women can't make ends meet, those who run feminist NGOs enrich themselves with taxpayers' money.

Everything is shady, opaque, and corrupt. Money from everyone to finance the privileges and vices of a handful of cunning women who enrich themselves with everyone's money.

The business is financed with the State's funds, that is, with the sacrifice of the taxpayers.

➡️ Uruguay

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