The same year, she created the Partido Nacional Feminista (PNF, National Feminist Party) to campaign for women's rights and suffrage.
[1] One of the first things that the group did was organize the Escuela de Cultura Femenina (School of Feminine Culture) to provide education for Panamanian women.
She was also contacted by Doris Stevens, the chair of the commission, who assigned González to work on legal issues and women's rights in the Pan-American Union office in Washington, D.C. From 1928 to 1930.
[4] Eventually, González grew resentful of Stevens's unilateral style of leadership and her dismissive approach towards Latin American women's issues.
As a result, González began to strengthen her relationship with more radical Latin American feminists, such as Cuban activist Ofelia Domínguez Navarro.
[4] González returned to Panama in 1930 and began working as a professor at the National Institute teaching economics, political science and sociology.
[1] González took an inclusionary stance towards women’s rights by collaborating with groups that emphasized the importance of analyzing the needs of intersecting identities, such as class and ethnicity, when fighting for equality.
During the 1930s, the anti-fascist alliance between liberals and radicals through Popular Front politics provided González and other Latin American feminists with the opportunity to advocate for women's social and economic rights.
[1] González continued her activities as a feminist organizer, working on issues of child welfare with UNESCO, as well as serving as an official in the International Federation of Women Lawyers (Federación Internacional de Abogadas).
[1] The School of Public Prosecutors in Panama bears her name,[7] as does an annual award given by the National Union of Lawyers to the legal professional who has excelled in the fight for women's or human rights.