Nelly Wicky

Nelly Wicky-Rosset (2 March 1923 – 27 January 2020) was a Swiss politician of the Swiss Labour Party and member of the Swiss National Council (19711975). Elected shortly after the introduction of women's suffrage, she was one of the first women in the National Council.[1]

Nelly Wicky
Member of the National Council of Switzerland
In office
29 November 1971  30 November 1975
Personal details
Born
Nelly Rosset

(1923-03-02)2 March 1923
Le Petit-Saconnex, Geneva Switzerland
Died27 January 2020(2020-01-27) (aged 96)
Onex, Switzerland
Political partySwiss Party of Labour

Biography

Nelly Rosset was born on 2 March 1923 in the commune of Le Petit-Saconnex, now a part of the city of Geneva. Her father, Robert Rosset, was a railroad worker. She studied education at the Rousseau Institute where she was a student of the psychologist Jean Piaget and later became a teacher in Geneva. In 1948, she married Robert Wicky, who was one of the founders of the Swiss Party of Labour.[2]

Nelly was politically active even as her husband was punished for his political beliefs. In 1963, she was elected to the Geneva Municipal Council.[3] In 1971, after Swiss women were granted the right to vote at the federal level and stand for election, she was elected from the Canton of Geneva to the National Council, becoming one of the first 12 women elected to the federal parliament.[3] She served one term and failed to win re-election in the 1975 election.[2] After her defeat, she remained active in politics as a member of the Geneva Municipal Council until 1991 and has a leading figure in the Labor Party until 1998.[1]

Wicky died on 27 January 2020 in the town of Onex. She was preceded in death by her husband, Robert, who died accidentally in 1983.[2]

References

  1. "Nelly Wicky". Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz (in German). Retrieved 2020-03-22.
  2. "Nelly Wicky n'est plus des nôtres". Gauchebdo. 2020-02-06.
  3. "Sie war die erste Kommunistin im Nationalrat". Tages Anzeiger (in German). 2020-02-04.
  • André Rauber: Formierter Widerstand: Geschichte der kommunistischen Bewegung in der Schweiz. Edition 8, Zürich 2003, ISBN 3-85990-033-1
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