Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Hungary’s president resigns

Pardon of man in child sex abuse case sparks public outcry

- By Justin Spike

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Hungary’s conservati­ve president resigned Saturday amid public outcry over a pardon she granted to a man convicted as an accomplice in a child sexual abuse case, a decision that unleashed an unpreceden­ted political scandal for the long-serving nationalis­t government.

Katalin Novák, 46, announced in a televised message that she would step down from the presidency, an office she has held since 2022. Her decision came after more than a week of public outrage after it was revealed that she issued a presidenti­al pardon in April 2023 to a man convicted of hiding a string of child sexual abuses in a staterun children’s home.

“I issued a pardon that caused bewilderme­nt and unrest for many people,” Novák said on Saturday. “I made a mistake.”

Novák’s resignatio­n came as a rare episode of political turmoil for Hungary’s nationalis­t governing party Fidesz, which has ruled with a constituti­onal majority since 2010. Under the leadership of populist Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, Fidesz has been accused of dismantlin­g democratic institutio­ns and rigging the electoral system and media in its favor.

Novák, a key Orbán ally and a former vice president of Fidesz, served as the minister for families until her appointmen­t to the presidency. She has been outspoken in advocating for traditiona­l family values and the protection of children.

She was the first female president in Hungary’s history, and the youngest person to ever hold the office.

But her term came to an end after she pardoned a man sentenced in 2018 to more than three years in prison. He was found guilty of pressuring victims to retract their claims of sexual abuse by the institutio­n’s director, who was sentenced to eight years for abusing at least 10 children between 2004 and 2016.

“I decided in favor of clemency in April of last year in the belief that the convict did not abuse the vulnerabil­ity of the children entrusted to him. I made a mistake,” Novák said Saturday. “I apologize to those I have hurt and to any victims who may have felt I am not standing up for them.

“As head of state, I am addressing you for the last time today. I resign from the office of president of the republic,” she said.

Also implicated was Judit Varga, another key Fidesz figure who was minister of justice at the time and endorsed the pardon. Varga was expected to lead the list of European Parliament candidates from Fidesz when elections are held this summer.

Varga announced that she would take political responsibi­lity and “retire from public life, resigning my seat as a member of parliament and also as leader of the EP list.”

 ?? ?? Katalin Novák
Katalin Novák

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