Stéphanie Koplowicz Explained

Stéphanie Koplowicz (born 16 May 1977 in Uccle) is a Belgian politician, currently sitting in the French Community Commission with the Workers' Party of Belgium.

She holds a bachelor's degree in arts and has a son who is disabled.[1]

Koplowicz served as a marketing assistant for Randstad from 1999 to 2000. Afterwards, she worked in a number of different jobs, including independent journalism, translation, casting assistant, and from 2011 to 2012, as a consultation for the city of Schaerbeek.

Political career

Koplowicz was elected as a municipal councillor in Forest on the PTB list in the 2018 Belgian local elections.[2] During the campaign, one of her posters was targeted by neo-Nazi vandalism.[3]

In the 2019 Belgian regional elections, she was elected to the French Community Commission, the francophone authority of the Brussels-Capital Region.[4] She was named head of the Workers' Party of Belgium caucus on the commission.[5]

In November 2019, she signed an open letter supporting the Union des progressistes juifs de Belgique for being critical of Israel and declared that she supported the cancellation of an economic mission of the Wallonian and Bruxelloise regions to Israel.[6] [7]

In September 2020, she spoke at a rally in Brussels in favour of abortion rights.[8]

During the COVID-19 pandemic in Belgium, she expressed difficulties over the commission's handling of online meetings, as she suffered from a visual disability.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Le Soir. October 2018. A Forest, la révolution porte le nom de Stéphanie Koplowicz.
  2. Web site: Stéphanie Koplowicz. 2019-07-25. PTB. fr-BE.
  3. Web site: 9 October 2018. Des tags antisémites.
  4. Web site: 2019-08-19. Koplowicz (PTB): "On n'est pas là pour faire de la figuration". 2021-07-12. Édition digitale de Liège. fr.
  5. Web site: Libre.be. La. 2018-03-28. Forest: Stéphanie Koplowicz sera tête de liste PTB. 2021-07-12. LaLibre.be. fr.
  6. Web site: UPJB. November 2019. Critiquer la politique israélienne, ce n'est pas de l'antisémitisme. Le Vif.
  7. Web site: The Brussels Times. November 2019. Brussels government cancels trade mission to Israel and Palestine.
  8. Web site: 2020-09-28. Journée mondiale du droit à l'IVG: manifestations à Bruxelles et en Wallonie. 2021-07-12. Le Soir. fr.
  9. Web site: 2021-05-19. Forest: conseil communal en semi-présentiel grâce à l'intervention d'Unia. 2021-07-12. Édition digitale de Bruxelles. fr.