Lise Girardin


Lise Girardin was a Swiss politician. A member of the Free Democratic Party, she was the woman to be elected as mayor of Geneva and the first woman elected to the Council of States.

Biography

Lise Girardin was born on 15 February 1921 in Geneva. She graduated from the University of Geneva and became a teacher. In 1960, the Canton of Geneva granted women the right to vote. Girardin, who already held a lower judgeship, ran for and won the 1961 election to the Grand Council of Geneva. In 1968, she was elected as the city's mayor, the first woman to win that post.
In 1971, Switzerland granted women the right to vote at the federal level. In the 1971 elections later that year, Girardin was elected to the Council of States while 10 others were elected to the National Council, making them the first women to sit in the Federal Assembly.
Girardin left the Council of States after the 1975 Swiss federal election but remained active in politics. She served one more term as Mayor of Geneva and participated in various referendums. Girardin died on October 16, 2010.