REAL WOMEN OF CANADA
is a pro-family women’s movement.
Our common bond is our belief that the family is the most important unit in society.
We are dedicated to promote the equality, advancement and well-being of women whether in the home, the workplace, or the community, and to motivate government to integrate the needs of the family into government policy and legislation.
OUR ISSUES
Support Our WonderWe Campaign!
Help REAL Women of Canada promote the equality, advancement and well-being of all women, and to motivate government to integrate the needs of the family into government policy and legislation.
We are the only social conservative women’s advocacy group in Canada. Since federally incorporated in 1983, REAL Women of Canada has positioned itself as the only independent, non-government funded, non-profit organization representing women who uphold traditional values in a not so traditional world. We are an alternative for the majority of Canadian women who do not support the radical feminist ideology. At the core of our efforts is the belief that the natural family of mother, father and children is the most important and fundamental unit of society.
When government steps in to create legislation which undermines the family, we step in to share a perspective that may otherwise not be represented. We promote the equality, advancement and well-being of women. We believe in respecting life from conception to natural death and we bring opinion to societal issues that weaken, ignore, and even destroy our core values of family, freedom and faith.
FREE GIFT!
When you donate $100.00 or more to REAL Woman of Canada, we’ll send you a copy of a book of your choice.
Pierre Elliott Trudeau’s Great Betrayal
By Gwendolyn Landolt, National Vice President of REAL Women of Canada and Patrick Redmond

From Democracy to Judicial Dictatorship in Canada
The Untold Story of the Charter of Rights
By Gwendolyn Landolt, LLB, Patrick Redmond, PhD, and Douglas Alderson, MA, LLM
This book provides the reader with a three part assessment of our current state of constitutional crisis. The first part is a survey of the politics that went into the 1982 patriation of Canada’s Constitution. The second, the loss of Parliamentary sovereignty and the rise of judicial activism. In the third part, the authors make the case that reform is not only necessary but possible. Both the courts and Parliament must actively seek to re-balance their respective roles based on principles of responsible government and electoral accountability, to ensure that Canada, once again, becomes strong and free, rooted in the consent of the governed.
Read review here.
OUR NEWS & VIEWS BLOG