After her liberation from prison, Drif went on to create an organization for youth who were orphaned during the
Algerian War of Independence, while also working as a criminal lawyer in
Algiers. She went on to be one of the first women elected to the Algerian Council of the Nations, where she continued to work for 15 years. She was a member until January 2016. Ultimately she became the Vice President. During her time on the council, she presided over the "le Groupe d’amitié Algérie-France" (Algerian-French Goodwill group), where her role was to "promote relations of friendship between the French people," "relations of confidence" "between the Algerian and French parliaments,"..." to discuss the problems that interest our two populations to be frank". In the same speech, she indicated that "since the Declaration of the 1 November 1954, the FLN said, and remained constant, that they fought against colonial forces and not the French people." She was one of the founding critics of the "
Code de la Famille" when it was enacted in 1984. The
Family Code was subject to much criticism and many of the same female militants, including Drif, who participated in the war continued to march in the 1980s against the Family Code and
Islamic fundamentalism and gender inequality in Algeria after the war. Although she was considered a heroine in the War of Algerian Independence by her generation, her place in political life has become criticised by younger generations. The mujahideen that fought for the Algerian independence have been accused of taking privileges after the liberation (pensions, priority employment, credit, taxi licenses and debit cards) granted by the Algerian state. The resistors, in part because of their place and influence, were assimilated into a space of privilege that can still cause problems. Drif was appointed to the Senate of Algeria and in her position, like others of the older mujahideen, was targeted with much animosity. She was a victim of many accusations, all difficult to verify, but all very critical in the Algerian public. Most notably, in January 2014, her old companion in the resistance, Yacef Saâdi, accused her of selling out Ali La Pointe. ==Personal life==