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The Right Honourable
Sotty Haloranov
President John F. Kennedy with Prime Minister of Jamaica, Sir Alexander Bustamante (04) (cropped).jpg
Sotty TBD, 1954
16th Prime Minister of Imagua and the Assimas
In office
23 April, 1952 – 23 April, 1956
PresidentVictor Redmond Keswick
DeputyJim Stevens
Preceded byFrederick Maynard
Succeeded byMartin Ellingham
Member of Parliament for Tarnstead
In office
12 February, 1917 – 23 April, 1964
Preceded byHarold Cavalier
Succeeded byDwane Harris
Personal details
Born
Sotirian Perkins

(1876-02-24)February 24, 1876
Evertsgard, Saint Christopher's, Colony of Imagua
Died6 August 1969(1969-08-06) (aged 93)
Cuanstad, Imagua and the Assimas
NationalityImaguan
Political partyDemocratic Labour Party
Other political
affiliations
ISESWI (1903-1919)
ISP (1919-1937)
Labour Party (1937-1948)
SpouseMolly Egnell
Children3

Sotty Haloranov (born Sotirian Perkins, 24 February, 1876 - 6 August, 1969) was the seventh Prime Minister of Imagua and the Assimas, serving from 1952 until 1956, and a trade union leader.

Early life

Sotty Haloranov was born as Sotirian Perkins on 24 February, 1876 in Evertsgard, Saint Christopher's Parish (present day Evertsgard, Cuanstad) to Archibald Perkins, a blacksmith of mixed race, and to Tabitha Perkins (nee O'Halloran), a housewife of Caldish descent, as the youngest of six children, and the only son to survive childhood.

His early life was marked with tragedy: his father abandoned Tabitha and their children in 1879, and in 1881, Martha died of scarlet fever, leaving Sotty and his siblings orphaned.

According to Sotty's biography, a sailor from Vinalia took pity on him, and adopted him as his own, bringing him back to Vinalia where he was sent to school and studied at a university. In gratitude, Sotty would adopt the sailor's surname as his own. However, most historians dispute the veracity of Sotty's claims, citing Imaguan census records from 1891 reporting that he and his siblings lived with his paternal uncle near Lundholm, his surname not matching grammatical rules in the Soravian language and his surname's similarity to his mother's maiden name, and his "penchant for embellishing stories," with his 1942 and 1961 accounts of his experiences in Vinalia barely matching up.

In 1899, Sotty moved to Cuanstad where he took a job as a dockworker. His experience as a dockworker made him interested in politics, particularly as he resented "contributing to the economy of Imagua but not having a say in the politics of this land." This led him to becoming involved with the Dockworker's Union by 1900, and by 1903, he would join the Imaguan Subsection of the Estmerish Section of the Workers' International.

Political career

Early political career

After Sotty Haloranov joined the Imaguan Subsection of the Estmerish Section of the Workers' International, he became involved in the party newspaper, where he wrote about his experiences and his treatment during his time at the dockyards in Cuanstad, and the necessity for the Imaguan working class to "stand together against the elites."

At the same time, he remained involved in the trade union movement, but now focusing on trying to get the trade unions to cooperate with one another. In 1907, he was able to help forge an agreement between several trade unions to form a trade union centre, the Imaguan Trade Union Federation, with Sotty saying that it would "strengthen ties among the labour movement." Sotty would become involved in the ITUF's oprations, although he was not in a leadership position for the ITUF.

In 1908, Sotty Haloranov would stand in his first election, standing for Tarnstead. Although he stood little chance of winning, due to the fact that most people in Tarnstead did not own enough property to be able to vote for the Chamber of Commons, this experience taught him "the value of campaigning and the value of appealing to the common man." He would place a distant third, only securing five votes.

This experience emboldened Sotty Haloranov to fight for universal male suffrage, as Haloranov believed that "if anyone is deprived of the opportunity to vote just because they are poor, like my parents and family were, then it is a sign that we need to change the system."

Haloranov would run again in 1909 and 1913 but failed to get elected. However, in 1917, Haloranov succeeded in getting elected to the Tarnstead constituency, defeating Democrat MP Harold Cavalier, and he was sworn in on 12 February, 1917.

MP for Tarnstead

One of his first acts as MP for Tarnstead was advocating for universal male suffrage, with Sotty Haloranov supporting the Labour Party's demand to introduce universal male suffrage as a precondition for participating in a coalition government with the Democrats. At the time, Sotty Haloranov opposed women's suffrage, believing that women would "only vote as their husbands and the church dictated to them," effectively "diluting the voice of the people."

However, when the Estmerish Section of the Worker's International split in 1919, the Imaguan subsection also split as well. Despite his left-leaning views and sympathy to council socialism, his dislike of Ethel Cropper, who he later described as being "uncooperative and impossible to reason with" meant that Sotty Haloranov stayed with the party, which would become the Socialists.

After Peter Hansson died in 1920, Nelson Egnell became Chief Minister, and per constitutional convention, a snap general election was called. Due to the passage of universal suffrage, the Socialists were able to take advantage of newly-enfranchised supporters to sweep into power, as well as poor economic conditions as a result of the Great Collapse, with Sotty Haloranov winning his seat with 68% of the vote. During this time, Sotty Haloranov began advocating for "Imaguan independence," believing that Imagua was "now at a stage where it can and should take its rightful place on the world stage," while he served as parliamentary secretary for the Labour Minister.

Thus, by 1924, Haloranov comfortably won with 73% of the vote against his Democratic opponents. After the 1924 election, Haloranov was sidelined by Nelson Egnell, due to Haloranov's advocacy of Imaguan independence, although he retained his position as parliamentary secretary.

(TBC)