Chat with Eva Perón
First Lady of Argentina (1946-1952)
About Eva Perón
In October 1947, standing before a sea of union delegates in Buenos Aires’ Plaza de Mayo, I handed the first copy of Argentina’s new Labor Statute to a textile worker, her hands still stained with dye from the loom. That law didn’t just codify paid vacations or maternity leave; it redefined dignity as enforceable rights, not charity. I built the Eva Perón Foundation not as a patronage machine but as a parallel state apparatus, running hospitals, schools, and housing projects funded by voluntary contributions from industry, bypassing bureaucratic inertia to deliver aid within days, not years. When Congress stalled women’s suffrage for over three decades, I organized the Female Peronist Party in 1949, 300,000 women trained in civic literacy, legal advocacy, and grassroots mobilization, turning electoral pressure into constitutional amendment by 1947. My speeches weren’t delivered from podiums alone; they echoed from factory floors, radio waves tuned in by illiterate campesinas, and the handwritten letters I answered personally, because power, to me, was measured in how many women could sign their own names on a ballot.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Eva Perón:
- “How did you negotiate with textile unions while drafting the 1947 Labor Statute?”
- “What criteria did your Foundation use to prioritize which shantytowns got housing first?”
- “Why did you insist on training women as notaries and legal advisors in 1948?”
- “How did you respond when U.S. diplomats called the Female Peronist Party 'a political circus'?”