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No, not really. For instance, one example I've seen used is that many French republicans (for decades past the last French monarch actually was on throne) were suspicious of women's suffrage because they thought women would return a king to the throne. One argument was even that it would create instability, since there would then be pressure from the republican army to coup the king to return to a republic. What were the women "conforming to" then? Who determines the target of conformity? Men? But men were to the left of the women - the women weren't following the instructions of the men in voting, at least in all cases.
As an interesting historical note, this was also true in Spain in the early part of the 20th century. After the establishment of a Republic the left was deeply split on women's suffrage; some supported it on principle, others opposed it because they feared women would vote as a bloc for the right. Suffrage was in the end extended to women and in the next election in 1933 the right won in a landslide.
That’s not surprising to me, to be honest. Women tend to be more conservative than men outside the Anglosphere — and the relative unconservativeness of women inside the Anglosphere is only, what, half a century old?
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That is a good counter-example that works against my theory. But to what degree do we know that women were actually more royalist decades after the revolution? Also, when was this? Didn't the French pretty quickly revert to a monarchy in all but name? I could see it being the case that republicans didn't like the female franchise and simply called it royalist because it was bad. Similar to how everyone and their mother is called a White Supremacist these days. Mind you, I am merely musing, I have absolutely no data to back this up.
I can give you some historical data. The initial message spoke about "decades past the last French monarch actually was on throne", and yours about "quickly revert[ing] to a [monarchy] in all but name".
It should be noted that before the French Revolution, some french women had a right to vote in some circumstances: those that were declared heads of a noble family, because they were widows or single, or some religious women, were called to vote in the Etat Généraux. It is irrelevant to the discussion.
The last french monarchy died in 1848. It is also in 1848 that all french men got the right to vote (before that, the right to vote was limited to a few rich men).
The Second Empire lasted from 1952 to 1870.
After 1870, France was a Republic, except for 4 years during Second World War.
Women got the right to vote in France in 1944 (so right after second world war) and voted for the first time in 1945.
Some people on the left argue that France is still some kind of monarchy (a "republican monarchy") since 1958 (Fifth Republic) as the president is very powerful. However, as the president is elected for a finite amount of time, I suppose that is not what you could call "a monarchy in all but name".
So I think "decades past the last French monarch actually was on throne" meant from 1870 to 1944.
It is a difficult question to answer, but the question was not only that they were royalist, but that they were supposed to be more religious than men. It is difficult to know if it is true, but it is certain that it was one of the main arguments advanced by the anticlerical Parti Radical, which was a strong centrist party under the Third Republic.
OP claimed that women are (too) empathic and that this leads to a number of (suboptimal) permissive policy choices that we tend to call progressive. Stefferi countered that there were periods of time when women were regarded as much more conservative than men, even when the Zeitgeist went in a different direction. The French example was meant to illustrate this.
My position is that women are the arbiters of social orthodoxy and are much more conformist than men. When the orthodoxy is religious, they're more religious. When the orthodoxy is woke, they're more woke. After a couple decades of Republicanism, they should be more Republican if that ideology penetrated the social consciousness deeply enough.
A number of counter-examples were raised. The rise of Hitler and the support he received from women is one, the supposedly more royalist French women is another. The question is: are those good counter-examples? The former is certainly a good counter-example to the OP's proposal that women prefer more empathetic and permissive policies. I am not yet sure if it is a good counter to my claim. It could very well be that the Weimar Republic was mainly an elite project with mores that ran counter to the sensibilities of the masses. A similar thing could be true about female royalists in France.
You might be right (I don't know). The main point of my post was to give historical data.
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