Top Candidate to Lead United Nations is a Radical Abortion Activist
The selection process for the next United Nations Secretary-General, set to replace António Guterres in 2026, has ignited debate over a push to prioritize female candidates, effectively sidelining men.
And they’re reportedly all radical abortion activists.
Informal discussions within the UN General Assembly and Security Council, as outlined in a letter from General Assembly President Philemon Yang, emphasize appointing a woman for the first time in the UN’s 80-year history. This follows a 2015 resolution urging gender balance and regional rotation, with feminist groups and some member states, including France, arguing that a female leader is overdue after eight male predecessors.
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The process, governed by the UN Charter, involves the 15-member Security Council recommending a candidate for General Assembly approval, with permanent members (U.S., Russia, China, France, UK) holding veto power. Names like Amina Mohammed (Nigeria), Kristalina Georgieva (Bulgaria), and Michelle Bachelet (Chile) have surfaced as potential female contenders, though no formal nominations are yet public.
The race to select the next UN Secretary-General of the United Nations is well underway. All the frontrunners are women, and they are well-known abortion advocates.
The undisputed front-runner for the UN’s top job is Michelle Bachelet, a two-term president of Chile who led the UN agency for Women as well as the UN human rights office. She is a known champion of abortion rights and gender ideology and has been described as the Hillary Clinton of Latin America.
As president of Chile, she successfully shepherded a multi-year campaign to legalize abortion in Chile. As head of UN Women and the highest UN human rights official she streamlined abortion promotion in the UN bureaucracy as well as the promotion of transgender rights, including self-identification.
She issued a scathing attack against the U.S. Supreme Court after the 2022 Dobbs decision. In that case the court declared abortion was an issue that each American state should legislate democratically and not a constitutional right. Bachelet called the decision a “huge blow to women’s human rights and gender equality” and said that “abortion is firmly rooted in international human rights law and is at the core of women and girls’ autonomy.”
Given her track-record Bachelet is the preferred candidate of the feminist left.
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