'Marie Janson' (
23 July1873–
8 March 1960) was a
Belgian politician and the first woman to serve in the
Belgian senate.
Born in
Brussels, her father
Paul Janson was leading member of the progressive wing of the
Belgian liberal movement. Her brother
Paul-Émile Janson served as
Prime Minister of Belgium. Marie's mother, Anna-Augustine Amoré was a well-educated woman of middle-origins who had worked as teacher at
Isabelle Gatti de Gamond's school before her marriage; Marie herself was educated there.
She married lawyer and playwright Paul Spaak. The couple had four children, of whom
Paul-Henri Spaak, later Belgian Prime Minister like his uncle Paul-Émile, was the most famous.
During the
First World War Marie was active in social work and this led her to join the
Socialist Party. She was elected to the municipal council of
Saint-Gilles in 1921, and the same year was selected by the party's executive, led by
Émile Vandervelde, to serve in the
Belgian Senate. She continued to serve as a co-opted senator until 1958. Her long service led to her presiding over the opening of the Senate on
11 November 1952.
Her granddaughter
Antoinette Spaak followed in her footsteps, achieving another first: first woman to lead a Belgian political party, the
Democratic Front of Francophones.
Reference
★ Piette, Valérie, "JANSON Marie (1873–1960), épouse SPAAK" in E. Gubin, C. Jacques, V. Piette & J. Puissant (eds), ''Dictionnaire des femmes belges: XIXe et XXe siècles.'' Bruxelles: Éditions Racine, 2006. ISBN 2-87386-434-6