Gulf News

Hungary’s war on democracy

As Hungarians vote today, Britain is shamefully courting the Orban regime as it tries to get a favourable Brexit deal

- By Owen Jones

Is Hungary still a democracy? It was a question I posed to Nora Koves, an activist with the pro-democracy Eotvos Karoly Institute, in the Castro Bistro cafe in central Budapest. “I wouldn’t say that, no. Not, I think, anymore. We are heading to a kind of dictatorsh­ip, but we are not there yet. We are somewhere between.”

That was in the winter of 2016, a few months after the institute had discovered that it had been profession­ally bugged. A year-and-a-half later, on the eve of Hungary’s general election today, the situation has only deteriorat­ed further. Hungary has been ruled by the authoritar­ian Fidesz and its leader Viktor Orban for eight years. Fidesz is a party that combines contempt for democracy with xenophobia and crude antisemiti­c tropes. George Soros has long been a demonic figure for the far-Right, playing the traditiona­l caricature­d role of sinister Jewish puppetmast­er.

In Hungary, Soros adorns pro-government billboards, accused by Orban of conspiring to overwhelm the country with immigrants and refugees. His regime is cracking down on foreignfun­ded NGOs — particular­ly those linked to Soros. BuzzFeed has just exposed how an undercover operation is seeking to undermine and neutralise Soros-linked NGOs. It’s not surprising: Sorosfunde­d NGOS “must be pushed back with all available tools”, says Fidesz deputy chairman Szilard Nemeth, “and I think they must be swept out”.

Orban brags of creating an “illiberal democracy”. It is indeed evolving in the direction of other states, such as Russia and Turkey, which maintain the pretence, the trappings if you like, of democracy: There are elections, there are different political parties, there are different media outlets. But the actual substance of democracy is hollowed out.

Orban brags of creating an ‘illiberal democracy’. It is indeed evolving in the direction of other states, such as Russia and Turkey, which maintain the trappings, if you like, of democracy ...

A fragmented opposition

For example, after the largest independen­t newspaper,

Nepszabads­ag, uncovered scandals involving Fidesz, it was suspended and sold to a pro-Orban firm. Pro-government businesses have bought up other media outlets, while public broadcaste­rs echo the regime’s line. An electoral system that exploits the fragmentat­ion of Hungary’s opposition hands a dramatic advantage to the ruling regime.

Democracy is dying not just in Hungary, but in neighbouri­ng Poland as well, where another authoritar­ian government is rigging the political system in its favour. It is scandalous that the British government is attempting to cosy up to Orban’s autocratic regime in order to court support for a favourable Brexit deal. By these means, authoritar­ian populists are emboldened everywhere to assault democracy and civil liberties. For those of us who believe in solidarity, the war on democracy in Hungary is a war on democracy everywhere.

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