From 1919 to 1921, Ida Weis Friend advocated for a government-supported network of ethical businesses, including a woman-owned cooperative grocery store. She worked through both the New Orleans Housewives League and city government.[10]
Also at that time, she campaigned for Louisiana to ratify the 19th Amendment, giving women the right to vote. Ultimately, however, Louisiana voted against the amendment. Friend was active in the Era Club of New Orleans, a suffrage and service organization whose name was an acronym: Equal Rights for All.
In 1921, she was one of two women delegates to Louisiana's constitutional convention.[2] The resulting 1921 Constitution of Louisiana gave the state power to regulate working conditions and wages for women and girls. Friend later campaigned to get the state's minimum employment age raised from 14 to 16.[11]
She was founder of the New Orleans Hadassah, serving as its first president, from 1917 to 1920.[2] She also led the local chapter of the service organization B'nai B'rith; the chapter was later named after her.[2] From 1926 to 1932, she served as president of the National Council of Jewish Women.
Friend was also active in civil rights, serving in 1932 as a member of the Commission on Interracial Cooperation. In 1938, she helped found the New Orleans chapter of the Urban League, an organization dedicated to civil rights and economic empowerment.[2]
In the 1940s, she was a leader in the "Broom Brigade," a group of women seeking to clean up New Orleans City Hall. In 1946, the Brigade helped elect a reform candidate for mayor, "Chep" Morrison (deLesseps Story Morrison). They then influenced Morrison to advocate for their progressive agenda.[1] (The name referred to the Broom brigades of the 19th century, when women performed military-style exercises using brooms instead of rifles.)
At her death in 1963 at age 95, Friend was still active, serving as president of the board of directors of the New Orleans Home for the Incurables (now the John J. Hainkel, Jr. Home and Rehabilitation Center), a nursing facility founded in 1891 by a group of by New Orleans women.[12]
Ida Weis Friend's papers are held by Howard-Tilton Memorial Library at Tulane University.[13]