[1] In 1923, Campodónico joined with Otilia Arosemena de Tejeira [es], Clara González, Enriqueta Morales, and Sara Sotillo to found the National Feminist Party (Spanish: Partido Nacional Feminista) (PNF) and the National Society for Women's Progress (Spanish: Sociedad Nacional para el Progreso de la Mujer).
[4] During this period, Campodónico also helped establish a Panamanian branch of La Gota de Leche, a humanitarian organization aimed at providing milk for undernourished children.
[1] In the 1930s, after having four children, Campodónico began attending the Free School of Law (Spanish: Escuela Libre de Derecho) of Panama.
[3] With other feminists, she presented a petition with 2,000 signatures to the National Assembly of Panama demanding the right to vote and amendments to the Civil Code to establish a Juvenile Court System, as well as industrial schools and laws to protect working women.
[7] In July, 1941 a series of laws had been passed which effectively took away Panamanian women's citizenship, while at the same time offering them limited voting rights in provincial councils, if they were literate.
[8] On December 31, 1944, González founded the National Women's Union, (Spanish: Unión Nacional de Mujeres) (UNM)[5] with Campodónico on the administrative board.
She did not win a seat, but Gumercinda Páez and Esther Neira de Calvo were elected as part of the Constitutional Assembly, and finally women in Panama won the right to vote.