Controversial tradwife influencer Savanna Faith Stone, 21, has sparked outrage by doubling down on her claim that women should lose the right to vote, asserting that feminism is a CIA plot. Speaking at a conservative women's conference hosted by Turning Point USA in San Antonio, Texas, from June 5-7, 2026, Stone told Norwegian outlet VG that she would be "fine" with losing her voting rights.
Stone advocates for male-controlled household voting
"I believe every household should have one vote, where the man has the final word," Stone said. The Arizona-based TikTok star, who has over 300,000 followers, argued that women's suffrage has pushed the country too far left. "If only men voted, no Democrat would be in power in the USA. Men would never have voted for abortion, diversity, trans and LGBT issues," she claimed.
When pressed by VG on whether she truly wanted to give up her own vote, Stone insisted: "I don’t care - it’s fine for me to lose the right to vote if it means radical feminists don’t get to vote." Asked about potential disagreement with her husband, she replied: "We’ve agreed from day one. It’s madness that people who politically disagree marry each other."
Feminism as a CIA conspiracy theory
Stone escalated her remarks by endorsing a conspiracy theory circulating on US forums that feminism was a CIA operation. "Women didn’t fight hard. It was funded by the CIA and evil, rich elite families. 96% of women didn’t want voting rights," she told VG, though no evidence supports this claim. She added: "It was all a government plot. Feminism is awful."
When challenged on whether feminism provides women more choice, Stone asked: "Before feminism, what did men have that women didn’t have, apart from the right to vote?" Her comments have drawn widespread condemnation, with critics noting the irony of a female influencer arguing against women's rights.
Stone's tradwife content and online influence
Stone, who married at 18, built her social media career on "tradwife" content promoting traditional domestic roles and rejecting modern feminism. One of her videos on "healthy rules" for marriage garnered over 2.5 million views, where she claimed husbands should have the final say and couples should not text members of the opposite sex without copying their partner.
The conference, a key recruitment event for right-wing organizers targeting Gen Z women, has become a platform for such views. Stone's statements have sparked fury online, with many calling for platform accountability. As of now, she has not issued any clarification or apology.



