In 1918, women who were over 30 years of age, had assets or were married to men with sufficient assets, had the right to vote, and 10 years later women over the age of 30 had the same "privileges" , thanks to the fact that women worked as workers and volunteers in their homes during World War I, and also because the suffragist movement of women had already worked for years to obtain the right to vote; so the so-called "weak sex," proved that it was not, by working during the war, and along with the liberal ideas of the politics of that time, gave rise to the most important avence in the female vote.