Katalin Novák, born on September sixth, nineteen seventy-seven, is a prominent Hungarian politician, economist, and jurist. She made history by becoming the first woman and the youngest individual to serve as the president of Hungary, a position she held from two thousand twenty-two to two thousand twenty-four. Elected at the age of forty-four, Novák's ascent to the presidency marked a significant milestone in Hungarian politics.
Before her presidency, Novák was an active member of the National Assembly representing the Fidesz party from two thousand eighteen to two thousand twenty-two. During this period, she also held the role of Minister for Family Affairs in the fourth Orbán government from two thousand twenty to two thousand twenty-one, where she focused on policies affecting families and children.
However, her presidency was not without controversy. In early two thousand twenty-four, Novák found herself at the center of a scandal that ultimately led to her resignation. This controversy stemmed from her decision to grant a presidential pardon in April two thousand twenty-three to Endre Kónya, a former deputy director of an orphanage in Bicske, who had been imprisoned for his involvement in a pedophilia case linked to the orphanage's director.