Judka Haller

Judka Haller, full name Írmingád Kristínastoschter Haller, is the twenty-second and current Primarch of the Great Chamber (Prigrokam) of Hendalarsk, a position she has held since 24th April 2019 and confirmed via a snap election later that year. At the time of her accession she became the youngest elected leader in the history of Hendalarsk, as well as one of the youngest leaders in office anywhere in the world. A member of the country's dominant Hendalarskara Social Front and a Kammermitglieder in Hendalarsk's lower chamber since 2011, Haller had previously served as Minister of Trade under former Prigrokämer Goteth Lukas and Kurt Krälenschmid, resigning in late 2018 in order to challenge Krälenschmid for the leadership of the HSF. Haller's premiership has been marked by an increased engagement with international institutions, deepening policies she championed as Minister of Trade, as well as growing tensions with Hendalarsk's state mining corporation and its allies over the consequences of extractivism in the Kupferberg massif on the region's indigenous Nünsyak population.

Early life
Haller was born in the northern Hendalarskara metropolis of Schulahaun on 19th March, 1982, the daughter of master industrial electrician Anton Haller and schoolteacher Kristína Eser. Neither of her parents were native to the city; Anton Haller had grown up in the eastern port of Groß-Maximilianshafen, while Kristína Eser hailed from the small rural town of Folwitsch, in the Kaíárek Hills around 150 miles west of Frehmenwerth. Haller's childhood was ordinary. She studied at Kindergáten KSLH-514 "19.-August-Bolwék" and Gesamdschul GSLH-229 "Matéa Íansen" and ultimately won a place at the prestigious Maximilianic University in Frehmenwerth on the back of her final exam results, despite her prior grades largely having been, in her own words, 'capable rather than outstanding'. At 'Maxi', Haller studied Modern History under the renowned Hendalarskara historian Andréus Mátínask, with a particular focus on eighteenth-century radical movements across Gothica. Largely shunning student politics, she instead participated in local feminist campaign groups such as the anti-domestic-violence charity FRAU, which garnered national attention for their dramatic and unconventional protests against Frehmenwerth City Councillor Paulus Aweran. In the course of these protests Haller was arrested twice but never charged, and after completing her studies she returned to Schulahaun.