In the middle of the week of March 8, International Women’s Day, already popularly known as 8M, many television personalities are joining the demands for equality between men and women. However, there are also voices critical of the current feminist movement, and one of them is that of Ana Rosa Quintana.
The presenter has spoken loud and clear about the mobilizations that are scheduled for this coming Wednesday. She has done it in the Telecinco space that bears her name, El programa de Ana Rosa, and from the first moment she has distanced herself from some slogans that she considers increasingly politicized.
Ana Rosa listened to the debate that was taking place among the gatherings of the current affairs section on the reform of the law known as “yes is yes”, which has divided the two parties present in the Government, PSOE and Podemos, just in the week of 8M. One of these commentators, José María Olmos, assured that “a very important part of the population has stopped feeling identified with these calls”, to which is added that “internal war” between parties.
In the midst of the debate, Quintana has decided to intervene to talk about one of the most massive demonstrations on the occasion of Women’s Day, the one that took place in 2019. “All women took to the streets. All women,” assured de that call. “When it has been instrumentalized by a part of the party, no longer. When we all went hand in hand, from the left, from the extreme left, from the right, from the more right, from the center … All the women went out into the streets,” she said. remembered her.
Precisely, that March 8, 2019 was “the only day in 18 years in which the program was not broadcast”, as Ana Rosa Quintana recalled in her speech. “And now I don’t feel identified with this queer feminism. I don’t feel identified,” she added right after.
Other collaborators, such as Esther Palomera, also focused on the demonstration that took place four years ago and shared the words of her partner. “In that year, all the women of this country understood that feminism was a transversal movement, and that is why we were all there,” to ensure that “ideological sectarianism” is currently being experienced. “It’s shameful,” concluded Ana Rosa.