Why Dolores Huerta Is Hopeful About the Fight for a Feminist Future: ‘We’re Going to Be Able to Overcome’

In the latest episode of Looking Back, Moving Forward, the legendary organizer and movement leader reflected on her “lifelong struggle” for intersectional economic justice—and what feminists need to do next. “We’ve got to keep on marching. We’ve got to keep on protesting. It is going to make a difference.”

American labor activist and co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America (UFW) Dolores Huerta speaks on stage during a UFW rally in California in 1975. She wears a poncho with the UFW logo. (Cathy Murphy / Getty Images)

Dolores Huerta has spent 70 years at the frontlines of the intertwined fights for economic justice and women’s rights.

In 1955, Huerta founded the Stockton, Calif., chapter of the Community Service Organization, which organized for economic justice within the Latinx community. In 1962, Huerta and Cesar Chávez founded the National Farm Workers Association, now known as the United Farm Workers’ Union, and she continued to serve as vice president of the organization for over 35 years, winning groundbreaking victories for farmworkers. 

In 1987, Huerta became a founding board member of the Feminist Majority Foundation, which now publishes Ms. In 2003, Huerta founded the Dolores Huerta Foundation, which cultivates grassroots movements nationally, and she still serves as its president.

Ms. Studios executive producer Michele Goodwin, Dolores Huerta, and Ms. consulting digital editor Carmen Rios in conversation during a 50 Years of Ms. event at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles. (Rodin Eckenroth / Getty Images)

Huerta has pioneered campaigns to expand political representation for women and people of color; advance policies that improve the lives of women, LGBTQ+ folks, farmworkers, communities of color, and the poor; and spark dialogue around the intersectional fight for economic justice, and the ways it is intertwined with our democracy.

For the third episode of the Ms. Studios podcast Looking Back, Moving Forward, she talked to me about what she’s learned in a lifetime of activism, why she still believes that “we are going to be victorious,” and what she believes feminists need to do now to meet this moment—and win.