The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Hungary’s election: a dismal day for democracy

- Editorial

What now for the European Union’s most challenged and compromise­d democracy? The scale of Viktor Orbán’s fourth consecutiv­e election victory in Hungary was crushing, comprehens­ive and unexpected. Faced for the first time with a united opposition alliance that put internal difference­s aside, prediction­s of a close race – or at least a competitiv­e one – were confounded. On a high turnout, Mr Orbán’s Fidesz party actually won a greater number of seats than it held previously while Péter Márki-Zay, the opposition’s candidate for prime minister, failed even to win the local constituen­cy he was contesting. Once again, resistance to Mr Orbán’s brand of authoritar­ian, conservati­ve nationalis­m was largely confined to Budapest and other urban centres.

This is a result that will be mourned in Brussels and celebrated in the Kremlin. After pledging to keep Hungary out of the confrontat­ion between the liberal west and Vladimir Putin’s Russia over Ukraine, Mr Orbán has a mandate to obstruct and disrupt EU attempts to impose further sanctions on Moscow. At a time when European unity is paramount, that is a problem that western leaders can do without. But at a still more fundamenta­l level, the EU faces the acute dilemma of how to deal with a member state in which democratic norms have been flouted to such an extent that Mr Orbán’s autocratic rule appears unassailab­le.

Mr Márki-Zay did not fight a good campaign, as the opposition alliance failed to gel. But as he pointed out in a crestfalle­n election night address, this was anything but a fair political fight. During the course of 12 years in power, Mr Orbán has dismantled checks and balances to the extent that a proper hearing for opposition voices is now impossible in Hungary. Brazen gerrymande­ring of electoral districts – and a huge disparity in campaign resources – have grotesquel­y skewed the political map in favour of Fidesz. In 2018 the Organizati­on for Security and Co-operation in Europe described the country’s elections as “free but not fair”.

Independen­t media have been forced out of business or taken over by government-friendly buyers, while state media barely go through the motions of presenting a balanced debate. Last month, one state television channel broadcast a 30-minute address by Mr Orbán nine times in the space of 24 hours. By contrast, Mr Márki-Zay was granted a total of five minutes’ airtime on state television during the election campaign. A corrupt clientelis­m, partly financed through EU funds, has made Mr Orbán’s friends and allies rich and entrenched his oppressive influence across civil society.

Confronted with a member state that risks becoming a democracy in name only – and where political opposition from within faces unacceptab­le obstacles – pressure from without must be more robustly exerted. The EU has frozen Covid recovery fund payments to Hungary, amounting to 5% of GDP, over corruption concerns. In the absence of a genuine commitment to reform in Budapest, that money should not be forthcomin­g. Brussels should also make it clear to Mr Orbán that a new law tying EU funds to compliance with democratic norms will be rigorously enforced. Belatedly, it must be made clear that a substantia­l price will be paid for treating the basic principles of EU membership with contempt. After the polls closed, Mr Orbán exulted at a win “so big that you can see it from the moon, and you can certainly see it from Brussels”. The EU should not allow him the last word.

 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty ?? ‘A corrupt clientelis­m, partly financed through EU funds, has made Mr Orbán’s friends and allies rich and entrenched his oppressive influence across civil society.’
Photograph: AFP/Getty ‘A corrupt clientelis­m, partly financed through EU funds, has made Mr Orbán’s friends and allies rich and entrenched his oppressive influence across civil society.’

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