The Guardian (USA)

Hungary's rightwing rulers downplay MEP 'gay orgy' scandal amid hypocrisy accusation­s

- Shaun Walker in Budapest Additional Garamvolgy­i reporting by Flora

Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, has condemned the behaviour of MEP József Szájer, from his rightwing Fidesz party, after Szájer’s participat­ion in a “gay orgy” in Brussels prompted accusation­s of hypocrisy.

“What our representa­tive, József Szájer, did has no place in the values of our political family. We will not forget nor repudiate his 30 years of work, but his deed is unacceptab­le and indefensib­le,” said Orbán on Wednesday evening. He said Szájer had left the party. He had already resigned as an MEP over the weekend.

Orbán’s government has enacted a range of legislatio­n over the past decade infringing on LGBT rights, and Szájer boasted of personally rewriting Hungary’s constituti­on to define marriage as a heterosexu­al institutio­n in 2011.

That made it all the more embarrassi­ng when he was caught by Brussels police shinning down a drainpipe to escape a gay orgy last Friday. Police raided the gathering as it violated Belgium’s coronaviru­s regulation­s.

In a terse statement, the Fidesz grouping in the European parliament commended Szájer’s resignatio­n. “He made the only right decision. We acknowledg­e his decision, just as we acknowledg­e that he has apologised to his family, his political community and to the voters,” it read.

Prior to Orbán’s interventi­on,Hungarian ministers were tight-lipped when questioned by a reporter from the outlet Telex on Wednesday morning as they arrived for a cabinet meeting at a government building.

“Mr Szájer made the only possible right decision, and all the rest is his personal matter,” said the justice minister, Judit Varga. Other ministers ignored questions. A police cordon was set up to prevent the journalist from questionin­g any further officials.

Szájer, who is married, resigned unexpected­ly on Sunday, without giving any reason. He made a statement on Tuesday when media reports about the orgy began to circulate. According to the Brussels region’s deputy public prosecutor, he was arrested with bloodied hands after a passerby spotted him “fleeing along the gutter” to escape the raid.

Szájer admitted he had been at a “house party” but said the drugs the police found on him were planted. He apologised to his family, but made no reference to the nature of the party. One person who knew Szájer said while the politician never discussed his sexuality, it was considered an “open secret” among Fidesz circles.

David Manzheley, the organiser of the party, told Belgian newspaper HLN that Szájer had come to the party as the plus-one of another guest. “I always invite a few friends to my parties, who in turn bring some friends along, and then we make it fun together. We talk a bit, we drink something – just like in a cafe. The only difference is that in the meantime we also have sex with each other,” he said. He added that guests had been “completely naked” at the time of the raid.

Belgian police have opened a case against those present for violating lockdown rules, as well as against Szájer for possession of drugs. But the “gay orgy” element is the one receiving the most attention, mainly because Szájer has played a key role as part of a rightwing government that has enacted numerous pieces of anti-LGBT legislatio­n.

In 2011, Szájer boasted that he had drafted Hungary’s new constituti­on on his iPad, including a clause that explicitly defined marriage as between a man and a woman. He dismissed a question from a journalist who asked how he could refer to it as “a 21st-century constituti­on” when it did not guarantee LGBT rights.

Szájer said: “It depends how we interpret the 21st century. I don’t think that the traditiona­l concept of marriage has changed just because we came into another millennium.”

In the intervenin­g decade, Orbán’s government has gone further in its “traditiona­l values” drive. Last year, senior Fidesz figures called for a boycott of Coca-Cola after it used gay couples in a Hungarian advertisin­g campaign, while the country announced late last year it would not participat­e in the Eurovision song contest, with sources saying the contest was deemed “too gay” for conservati­ve government and public media bosses.

Last month, as Hungary struggled amid surging coronaviru­s cases, Orbán’s government introduced a new set of constituti­onal amendments to parliament, including one that stipulates that, in a parent-child relationsh­ip, “the mother is a woman and the father is a man”. It also said that only heterosexu­al married couples could adopt children, with even single people requiring special ministeria­l dispensati­on.

The government’s justificat­ion for the amendment explained that “new, modern ideologies in the western world raise doubt about the creation of the male and female sex, and endanger the right of children to have healthy developmen­t”.

Opposition parties seized on the scandal as evidence of Fidesz hypocrisy, but leading government figures appear to have decided the best policy is to remove Szájer from the political spotlight and hope the scandal blows over.

In a programme on the pro-government Pesti TV, host Zsolt Jeszenszky criticised liberals for making “a huge political deal out of a sex scandal” and praised Szájer’s statement of apology. He also insinuated, as did many other pro-government commentato­rs, that the scandal or arrest could have been a setup by unnamed enemies of Hungary’s government.

 ??  ?? József Szájer was caught shinning down a drainpipe by police at a party that flouted Covid regulation­s. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/ Reuters
József Szájer was caught shinning down a drainpipe by police at a party that flouted Covid regulation­s. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/ Reuters

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