In 1932, Bográn founded the magazine,
Alma Latina, which became an influential feminist-political and cultural journal throughout Central America. At the time, she was opposed to
women's suffrage because of the violence associated with voting throughout Central America. Most Honduran women in the 1920s and 1930s, were not supporters of women's enfranchisement as it did not have a historic basis in the Honduran culture, where social and economic subordination were seen more as a class struggle, or simply accepted. This changed in the 1940s, when Bográn and other feminists saw the advantages to voting as a means to bring more democratic governance to the country. In 1944, Bográn was accused of being a communist by the Honduran government. Because she was working as a labor organizer in the northern part of the country, she was suspected of teaching communist doctrine as an agent for
Vicente Lombardo Toledano, a Mexican Marxist labor leader. The United States Ambassador to Honduras,
John Draper Erwin, concluded after an investigation, that there was no communist activity in the country and did not classify Bográn, stating "any person who agitates for improved labor conditions is often classified as a communist". That same year, she and Rodolfo Pastor Zelaya, a founder of the
Revolutionary Democratic Party of Honduras led a pro-democracy demonstration in
San Pedro Sula in protest to the arrests of citizens calling for the ouster of
President Tiburcio Carías Andino. The right to vote in Honduras was secured for literate women in 1955 and women were able to vote the following year for the first time. Upon the election of President
Ramón Villeda Morales, in 1957, Bográn was appointed to his cabinet, as undersecretary of Education. In 1959, she was appointed to serve as the federal Secretary of Public Education. Bográn had continued her work as an educator throughout her life and in 1963, for her service as director of the
Instituto Hondureño de Cultura Hispánica (Honduran Institute of Hispanic Culture), she was elected to the in Madrid. ==Death and legacy==