Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Hungary vs EU: Is Orban striving for Huxit?

Hungary's unofficial government paper "Magyar Nemzet" advocates Hungary's exit from the EU. Is Prime Minister Viktor Orban pulling the strings behind the scenes?

-

Hungary's unofficial government newspaper Magyar Nemzet (Hungarian Nation) often floats issues that Prime Minister Viktor Orban and his government would like to gauge public opinion on without addressing those issues themselves. Last weekend, it happened again. On Sunday (August 15), the paper opened debate on an issue that had previously been deemed offlimits even in Hungarian government circles: Hungary's exit from the EU.

"It is time to talk about Huxit" was the title of the Magyar Nemzet opinion piece. The news went off like a bomb in Hungary — with most larger media outlets reporting, opposition politician­s up in arms and pundits expressing concern. It was hardly surprising, for in spite of deep political divides, social and cross-party consensus held that the country's rightful place was in the European Union. Until now, that view had been one of the very few things most Hungarians could agree on.

Now, however, for the first time since Orban came to power in 2010, Hungary's exit from the EU is being openly broached by the government's most important news outlet. It is a situation without precedent.

The official English version reads: "[T]he time has come, now in July 2021, to seriously consider the possibilit­y of our withdrawal from a union of states with a thousand bleeding wounds, showing imperial symptoms, and treating the eastern and central European coun

tries incredibly arrogantly." The reason given: "Our paths have diverged as the West now consciousl­y ( … ) breaks from Christian morality and values. Instead, they aim to build a cosmopolit­an, faceless world society based on the unbridled selfenjoym­ent and self-destructio­n of the individual ( … ). [By contrast,] we Hungarians, Poles and central and eastern European people hold on to our cultural and religious foundation­s."

Hungarian government circles notified in advance?

The op-ed was written by Tamas Fricz, a political scientist known for radical and often crude, extreme-right views. But Fricz is no political outsider. Rather, he is a leading member of several important Orban-affiliated organizati­ons, including the Forum of Civic Alliance (COF), which periodical­ly stages "peace marches" — demonstrat­ions of power by the Orban government with tens or even hundreds of thousands of participan­ts who lend their ears to speakers engaging in harsh antiEU rhetoric.

But that is not the only indication that government circles had been informed about Fricz' op-ed in advance — or possibly even coordinate­d its thrust with him. Over the past couple of weeks, the Huxit issue has also been latched onto by various Hungarian politician­s, if only implicitly.

The EU — an 'intellectu­al morgue'

Hungary's Speaker of Parliament Laszlo Kover — second only to the president in terms of protocol — said in an interview at the beginning of July that unlike the 2003 referendum on EU membership that took place a few months before the bloc's major eastern enlargemen­t in May 2004, he would "definitely vote no" in a referendum on EU membership today.

At the end of July, Hungary's Justice Minister Judit Varga paraphrase­d a statement made by German Christian Social Union (CSU) politician Peter Gauweiler and printed in Germany's Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper, saying the EU was "no longer a refuge but an intellectu­al morgue."

Finance Minister Mihaly Varga, in turn, said during an interview last week that he would vote "yes" in a referendum on EU membership. Still, he added, by the end of the current decade, at which point Hungary will have become a net contributo­r to the EU, people might see the issue differentl­y.

'A life outside the EU'

Likewise, Viktor Orban himself has occasional­ly spoken of the issue, most recently in 2016 in connection with Brexit, saying "of course [there is] a life outside the EU." Orban has not yet contribute­d anything to the current Huxit debate. During the last couple of years, however, he has been embarking on an increasing­ly open and aggressive collision course with the EU — most recently with a law that bans so-called "homosexual­ity or sex reassignme­nt propaganda for minors" that was harshly criticized by Brussels. On such occasions, Hungary's PM has been increasing­ly clear about his rejection of the EU in its current form.

Consequent­ly, Hungary's opposition politician­s presume Orban and his inner circle were the real instigator­s behind the Magyar Nemzet op-ed. "Orban's campaign for the exit of our home country out of the EU has begun," wrote Left-Green politician Timea Szabo of the Dialogue for Hungary party (Parbeszed Magyarorsz­agert) on Facebook. "From now on, those who vote for Orban vote for the end of our EU membership." Similar statements were made by politician­s from virtually all other opposition parties.

Blackmail potential vis-a-vis Brussels

"Are we now, in a display of insurgent defiance, shutting the door on which we used to knock in order to be given permission to enter?" asked conservati­ve writer Balint Ablonczy, who concluded: "From now on, there can hardly be a more important issue in Hungarian politics."

Budapest- based political scientist Peter Kreko told DW that an exit from the EU was not yet in Orban's interest. "He is, however, interested in turning public opinion against the EU in order to potentiall­y blackmail Brussels with the threat of a possible Huxit. In this regard, his aim is to aggravate hostility towards the EU in Hungary."

Hungary's ultimate division One of his tools is the allegation that Hungary is receiving increasing­ly less money from the EU. That suggests the country is therefore unable to gain any more advantage from EU membership, added Kreko, who is currently a fellow at the Institute for Human Sciences (IWM) in Vienna. According to opinion polls, Hungarians regarded EU funding as one of the key advantages of EU membership.

"Neverthele­ss it should be pointed out that the vast majority of Hungarians have, in principle, a very firm proEuropea­n attitude," Kreko said. "Even a decade of ever-increasing EU skepticism and increasing­ly vulgar anti-EU propaganda issued by the Orban government has not been able to change that."

Given that parliament­ary elections are scheduled next spring, it could, therefore, "be a tactical error to exaggerate antiEU propaganda," said Kreko, as this could drive undecided voters with a pro-European attitude into the arms of the opposition.

The assorted reactions to the Magyar Nemzet op-ed make one thing evident: With an open Huxit debate, Hungarian leader Viktor Orban may just divide his country once and for all.

 ??  ?? Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has been stoking resentment against the EU for quite some time
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has been stoking resentment against the EU for quite some time
 ??  ?? The English version of the "Magyar Nemzet" Huxit op-ed
The English version of the "Magyar Nemzet" Huxit op-ed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany