Jeanet Maria Petronella van der Laan (pronounced[ʑɑˈnɛtfɑndərˈlaːn]; born 20 January 1980) is a Dutch retired footballer, teacher, and politician of the social liberal party Democrats 66 (D66).
A defender of FC Lisse, she became the first girl to be allowed to play in a national boys' competition in 1995. She later played for Ter Leede, winning the women's national championship multiple times, and she appeared in 29 international matches as part of the women's national football team. Van der Laan also worked as a teacher, and she retired from football in 2007.
Van der Laan was born and raised in Lisse, South Holland.[5] She has an older brother and a younger sister, and her parents worked at a dahlia nursery.[6][7] In 1998, after having completed her secondary education, Van der Laan started studying Dutch at the Educatieve Faculteit Amsterdam, a cooperation between the Amsterdam and Holland Universities of Applied Sciences to train teachers.[8][9]
Van der Laan began playing football at the age of six.[12] In June 1995, she became the first girl to be allowed to play in a national boys' competition of the Royal Dutch Football Association (KNVB). FC Lisse's male B1 team, to which Van der Laan belonged, had won a regional league and had been promoted to the national third division.[13] The KNVB granted the permission to Van der Laan due to her role in the promotion and due to her performance in the women's national youth team.[14]
Van der Laan started teaching Dutch at the Lisse secondary school Fioretti College in the early 2000s and also became team leader of its first year in 2005.[17][21] While still working there, she was elected into the municipal council of Lisse in the 2010 municipal election as a member of the local political party Nieuw Lisse.[22] She left the council in September 2013 in order to join D66 and was succeeded by her brother Michael.[23] Van der Laan was D66's third candidate in Lisse in the 2014 municipal election, and she became the party's caucus leader in the council after the election.[24][25]
She was appointed chair of D66's new national thematic department Sport and Exercise in early 2016. Van der Laan had lobbied for its establishment in order to make sport policy more prominent within the party.[26] She was D66's 32nd candidate in the 2017 general election, receiving 1,588 preference votes, but was not elected due to her party winning nineteen seats.[27] Van der Laan was re-elected to Lisse's council in 2018, being D66's lead candidate.[28] She left both the council and the Fioretti College in May 2018 to serve as alderwoman in the new municipal executive.[29][30] Her portfolio included spatial planning, sustainability, education, culture, youth, and sport affairs.[30]
House of Representatives
Van der Laan ran for member of parliament again in the 2021 general election, being placed thirteenth on D66's party list.[31] During the campaign, she said that politics should pay more attention to sports, calling it neglected and important for fighting obesity.[11][32] Van der Laan was elected into the House of Representatives with 10,489 preference votes, and she was installed on 31 March.[5][33] Her specialities within D66 were higher education, science, emancipation, sports, health care prevention, and long-term care, and she is on the Committees for Education, Culture and Science; for Health, Welfare and Sport; for Justice and Security; and for Social Affairs and Employment. She is also a member of the Dutch parliamentary delegation to the Council of Europe.[7][34]
A few months after her election, Van der Laan started writing a bill to ban conversion therapy together with politicians from other parties. This followed inaction by the cabinet on the issue after a House majority had indicated the desire for such a ban.[35] The Council of State advised against the law in early 2023, saying that its added value had to be elaborated on. The governmental body stated that discrimination and coercion were already forbidden, while a total ban would be in conflict with the freedom of religion.[36] Van der Laan also successfully called for an investigation into abuse in competitive dancing following news reports, and she introduced a motion to explicitly prohibit match fixing, which passed the House.[37][38]
Van der Laan resides in Lisse and has also lived in the nearby town of Noordwijk.[34][40] She has been married to Kevin Winter, a retired amateur football player for FC Lisse, IJsselmeervogels, and Rijnsburgse Boys, since 2015. They have three sons, two of which are twins.[41][42]
^Diedrich, Anton (5 February 1999). "Uit de dekking" [Out of the defense]. Leidsch Dagblad (in Dutch). p. 22. Retrieved 29 June 2021 – via Historische Kranten, Erfgoed Leiden en Omstreken.
^Leefmans, Loman (22 December 1998). "De verandering" [The change]. Leidsch Dagblad (in Dutch). p. 21. Retrieved 29 June 2021 – via Historische Kranten, Erfgoed Leiden en Omstreken.
^Brouwer de Koning, Tim (8 June 1995). "Jeanet mag bij de jongens van B1" [Jeanet is allowed to join the boys of B1]. Leidsch Dagblad (in Dutch). p. 1. Retrieved 29 June 2021 – via Historische Kranten, Erfgoed Leiden en Omstreken.
^ abcVan der Hulst, Peter (17 September 2003). "Van der Laan neemt afscheid van Oranje" [Van der Laan leaves Dutch football team]. Leidsch Dagblad (in Dutch). p. 23. Retrieved 29 June 2021 – via Historische Kranten, Erfgoed Leiden en Omstreken.
^"Vera Pauw, Michael van Praag en Leonne Stentler moeten vrouwenploeg Telstar naar eredivisie helpen" [Vera Pauw, Michael van der Praag, and Leonne Stentler have to help Telstar's women's team into Eredivisie]. IJmuider Courant (in Dutch). 12 October 2020.