But some women who felt a jolt of sisterly pride from across the Atlantic also felt a pang of empathy at another part of the story. In Spain, some were questioning whether Carme Chacon should be able to take her state-mandated 16 weeks of paid maternity leave, given the importance of her job.
And that kind of dilemma resonates for women anywhere who have jobs they need and value: What do you do when the timing of motherhood clashes with the upward trajectory of your career?
For most American women, of course, the idea of 16 weeks paid leave is a mere dream. The United States is one of a handful of countries with no guaranteed paid maternity leave policy, along with Swaziland, Papua New Guinea, Lesotho and Liberia, researchers found last year.
On the state level, New Jersey is set to become the third state with a law granting paid leave, after California and Washington. And the federal Family Medical Leave Act provides, with some exceptions, 12 weeks of unpaid leave and benefits.
But whatever the provisions, women often find themselves wondering if they should take all their maternity leave
- often actually a disability leave - and whether that would hurt their career.
"It's scary to leave," says Susan Kane, editor in chief of Parenting magazine. "Women are still afraid their employers will learn they can do without them." As for Chacon, whose photo left Kane feeling "delighted and excited," she should feel free to take her leave, Kane says. "Anyone in power has a No. 2 who can cover for them. Besides, she can take calls
- she'll still have a brain!"
Prominent U.S. feminist Eleanor Smeal scoffs at the suggestion, made in a Spanish newspaper, that Chacon, who hasn't said how much leave she'll take, would be hurting her country by taking all of it. What, she asked, would people say if it were a male minister who got sick? At least this, you can plan.
"It's just an excuse to keep us out of a host of jobs - saying women can't do things because they get pregnant," said Smeal, president of the Feminist Majority Foundation.
Smeal was one of the women who complained a few years ago to ABC News when Elizabeth Vargas, the new co-anchor of ABC's "World News," left her job not long after co-anchor Bob Woodruff was wounded in Iraq. She was pregnant with her second child and had a toddler at home, and said she needed to focus on those responsibilities.
Women's groups were outraged, assuming Vargas had been pushed aside, and demanded ABC find a way to keep her in the job. But Vargas said it was her choice. She returned after maternity leave to anchor the news magazine "20/20."
"I loved my job at 'World News,'" she wrote later, "but the prospect of doing it well, and still finding time to be a good mother to 3-year-old Zachary and my new baby, Samuel, felt impossible."
Vargas had a great job waiting for her. But many women find they lose out on promotions and pay once they begin the reproductive route, experts say.
"There's a clear penalty to motherhood and caregiving in this country,"
says Eileen Appelbaum, director of the Center for Women and Work at Rutgers
University. "Basically we've said to women, if you can conduct yourself in
the workplace as if you were a man, without any other responsibilities,
being available day and night, then (and only then) will your pay and
opportunities will be similar."