Jeltje van Nieuwenhoven
(born at Noordwolde
on 2 August 1943) is a Dutch politician. She was a member of
the House of Representatives
for over 20 years for the social-democratic PvdA, and its chair for four
years.
Biography
Before entering politics
Jeltje van
Nieuwenhoven was born in Noordwolde
in the Frisian municipality
of Weststellingwerf
. Her father was a carpenter. She went to a
public
elementary
school in Noordwolde. After obtaining her MULO, specializing in
the arts, she studied to become librarian. Between 1960 and 1979
she was librarian.
First for the local library in Wolvega
and the
provincial library of Friesland, but in
1966 she began to work at the Institute for the History of Art of the University of Utrecht. In the
mean time she had become a member of the PvdA. In 1974 she became
librarian at the scientific foundation of the PvdA, the
Wiardi Beckman Foundation.
She also
became treasurer of the Vinkeveen
branch of the party. In 1976 she joined the
political working group of the women's movement within the PvdA,
the Red Women (Rooie Vrouwen). In 1978 she was elected to the
local legislative in Vinkeveen and she
immediately became a member of the
local
executive. In 1979 she became personal assistant to the
chairman of the PvdA,
Max van den
Berg.
Political life
In the
1981 elections,
Van Nieuwenhoven was elected into the House of Representatives. In
the
1982 election Van
Nieuwenhoven was not elected, having been placed in an ineligible
position. Instead she joined the PvdA board. In 1983 she entered
parliament however because a member of the PvdA resigned from
parliament She would remain a member of parliament until
2004.
As member of parliament she held several positions within the
party: in the period 1990-96 she was a member of the Curatorium of
the Wiardi Beckman Foundation, where she had been librarian;
between 1997 and 2001 she served on the party board.In 1995 she was
made a Knight of the Order of the Dutch Lion.
In parliament she showed a particular interest the
Netherlands Public
Broadcasting,
media and
culture, and was the party's
spokesperson on these matters. Belonging to the left wing of the
PvdA, she is known for her ardent
feminism.
In 1985 she voted, against the majority of her parliamentary party,
for the
Beckers motion which would have
removed all nuclear weapons from the Netherlands and in 1997 she
voted for the
Rouvoet motion to
allow the Gümüs family to remain in the Netherlands, once more
against the majority of her parliamentary party. It should be noted
that both motions failed. She was chairperson of the committee for
Women's emancipation between 1989 and 1994 and of the committee for
Health, Welfare and Sports between 1994 and 1998.
As a prominent member of parliament, Van Nieuwenhoven held several
positions within the world of the arts.
She was on the board
of the foundation for the Festival of Stories in Amsterdam
, between 1989 and 1994. She was chairperson
of the board of the Combined Theaters in Amsterdam between 1992 and
2002. She also sat on the board of the Amstel Foundation for Youth
Theatre in the same period. Furthermore she was a member of the
board of the Dutch Film Festival and chaired thata of the
VSB Poetry Prize.
In 1998, she was elected President of the House of Representatives.
She was the first woman to have this function. In 2002 she did not
stand for reelection and instead became
chairperson ad interim of her own
parliamentary party, which was a considerable crisis, after losing
the
elections. In
November 2002 she stood for
election of chairperson and
top candidate for her own party, but
was convincingly beaten by
Wouter Bos.
Van Nieuwenhoven came second (with a 30% margin) and was second
candidate and first woman on the PvdA list. She became the
vice-chair of the parliamentary party, responsible for internal
affairs.
Retirement from politics and subsequent return
In 2004
she left parliament to become a member of the provincial executive of South Holland
. In 2006 she resigned from this post for
health reasons. In 2005 she was rewarded with the Golden Pin of the
PvdA, which had previously been given only to
Joop den Uyl and
Max van der Stoel. She currently chairs
the committee that will select and assess prospective parliamentary
candidates for the PvdA.
Van Nieuwenhoven still holds several
functions in the Dutch arts world: she is chairperson of the
National Theatre, a member of the academy for the Golden
Goosefeather (an art prize), and of the advisory board of the
Institut Néerlandais and
the Kröller-Müller Museum
. In October of 2009, she came back from
retirement to become candidate for the PvdA leadership in The
Hague. On the 23rd of October she then was confirmed to lead the
PvdA in to the The Hague local election in 2010 .