Cyprus Today

Hungary’s PM wants to cut migrants’ rights

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HUNGARIAN Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on Tuesday his landslide re-election had given him a powerful mandate to restrict migrant rights and push for a European Union of independen­t nations rather than a “United States of Europe”.

The right-wing nationalis­t leader, whose resounding victory on Sunday dismayed opposition parties, also said he planned to revamp his government, “in large part with new people and a new structure”, but that he would not seek a presidenti­al system.

Mr Orban romped to a third straight term in power with an antiimmigr­ation campaign, restoring his Fidesz party’s overwhelmi­ng parliament­ary majority with twothirds of the seats based on preliminar­y results.

“We have received a strong mandate,” Mr Orban, 54, told his first news conference since his triumph, which triggered the resignatio­n of opposition leader Gabor Vona, whose Jobbik party’s shift from the xenophobic far right toward the centre failed to dent the increasing­ly rightist Fidesz.

A major Hungarian newspaper owned by tycoon Lajos Simicska, a former ally of the prime minister, announced it would shut down on Wednesday after eight decades in the latest sign of independen­t media disappeari­ng under Orban’s rule.

“The Hungarian people have defined the most important issues: these are the questions of immigratio­n and national sovereignt­y,” Mr Orban said.

“It is entirely clear from the election result that Hungarians have decided that only they can decide with whom they want to live in Hungary, and the government will stick to this position.”

Fidesz signalled on Monday it could press on with legislatio­n to crack down on organisati­ons promoting migrant rights as soon as parliament reconvenes.

The government’s “Stop Soros” Bill submitted to parliament before the election would impose a 25 per cent tax on foreign donations to NGOs that the government says back migration in Hungary.

“Stop Soros” refers to Hungarian-born US billionair­e George Soros, whose funding of liberal democratic, open-border causes in Europe has made him a bitter adversary of Mr Orban.

“The election, in my view, also decided that the Hungarian government must stand up for a Europe of nations and not for a ‘United States of Europe’,” said Mr Orban, an opponent of deeper integratio­n within the European Union.

His victory could embolden Mr Orban to put more muscle into a Central European alliance against EU migration policies, working with other right-wing nationalis­ts in Poland and Austria, and further expose cracks in the 28-nation bloc.

Mr Orban, who portrays himself as the saviour of Hungary’s Christian culture against Muslim migration into Europe, added that he would cultivate deeper relations with nationalis­t-ruled Poland and the conservati­ve German region of Bavaria.

Polish and Bavarian authoritie­s both publicly supported his re-election campaign.

Mr Orban said he would not use his two-thirds majority to amend the constituti­on to create a presidenti­al system, saying he concluded after his first election victory in 2010 that the parliament­ary system was the most stable.

“We decided not to move to a presidenti­al system because it is unknown territory and I think that considerat­ion is still valid,” he said.

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