This is the super-scandal that should bring down
Viktor Orbán – and it’s far from over
Katalin
Cseh
Hungary’s president quit over the fallout of a child
abuse case, but the ‘pro-family’ prime minister still has questions to answer
Sat 17 Feb
2024 07.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/feb/17/hungary-viktor-orban-scandal-president-resign
After
nearly 14 years running Hungary, Viktor Orbán’s regime is crumbling under the
weight of its own hypocrisies. The country’s president, Katalin Novák, a close
Orbán ally, was forced to resign in disgrace earlier this month for issuing a
pardon to a man convicted of helping cover up a sex abuse case at a children’s
home. The former justice minister, Judit Varga, who approved the decision, also
quit. This followed a tumultuous week of public outcry and protests in
Budapest.
The scandal
has not only rocked Orbán’s autocratic government to its core, it has laid bare
the phoney nature of his self-declared Christian, family-values agenda. It has
also exposed what little power even high-ranking political figures wield under
Orbán’s de facto one-person rule: at the drop of a hat, he appears ready to
dispose of close allies, even the supposedly independent president of the
republic, to avoid accountability himself.
The scandal
goes back to April 2023, when Novák granted a clutch of presidential pardons to
mark the occasion of a visit to Hungary by Pope Francis. Details of such
pardons are typically kept opaque, but it was announced at the time that the
far-right activist György Budaházy, convicted of terrorism and a range of other
violent offences, was among them – with Budaházy riding out of jail on a horse.
It wasn’t
until 2 February this year, however, that investigative journalists revealed
that Novák’s pardons had included a man convicted of helping to cover up
horrifying sexual abuse in a children’s home in Bicske. The extent of the
abuse, between 2004 and 2016, was appalling. To protect his boss, the home’s
deputy director aided in the cover-up. Novák’s pardon shortened this man’s
sentence and cleared his criminal record.
Two former
residents of the Bicske children’s home had courageously shared their stories
with the Hungarian public to reveal the truth about those entrusted with their
care. The pardon risks reopening their wounds, and potentially dissuading
others from coming forward.
The motive
behind Novák’s pardon in the child abuse case remains unclear. Reporters
detailed the convict’s political ties to Hungary’s reformed church and Orbán’s
party elite. While in her resignation speech Novák admitted making a mistake,
her rationale remained under wraps. It is telling that Péter Magyar, Varga’s
ex-husband, has accused senior figures within the regime of scapegoating Novák
and Varga.
This
episode exposes the sham at the Orbán regime’s ideological core, undermining
his international efforts to forge political alliances based on a supposedly
“pro-family” platform. Hungary’s carefully cultivated image touts
“FAMILY-FRIENDLY HUNGARY” – a slogan displayed all over Budapest’s airport,
among other places.
Both of the
ousted politicians, young women amid Orbán’s army of ageing men, were
instrumental in presenting this illiberal, far-right agenda abroad, giving it a
human face. Varga was slated to lead the ruling party Fidesz’s list for the
European parliament elections in June and there was speculation that she was to
be Orbán’s new point person in Brussels. Novák symbolised the child-protection
agenda, having served as minister for families and hosted the Budapest
demographic summit, which brought together rightwing luminaries from Italy’s
Giorgia Meloni and former US vice-president Mike Pence to Canadian psychologist
Jordan Peterson.
While
Novák’s role as Hungary’s president was largely ceremonial, she travelled the
globe, discussing “the protection of traditional values and families” with
Florida governor Ron DeSantis and even meeting tech mogul Elon Musk. With the
rotten core of Orbán’s regime laid bare, one wonders how such summits will spin
the narrative of family values in future.
Because to
many of us, it has seemed clear that Orbán’s government uses child protection
as a smokescreen for the repression of LGBTQ+ activists and for attacking
western liberalism. A recent “child protection law” was used to ban the
depiction of homosexuality to minors, echoing Russian law. Bookstores are even
restricted, again for supposed child protection reasons, from selling certain
works, such as Heartstopper, unless they are wrapped in plastic. Both Hungary’s
opposition and the European Commission, backed by 15 EU governments, came out
against the law as discriminatory and a violation of the democratic principles
that underpin EU membership. Organisations campaigning on children’s rights
across Europe said the law put children at greater risk. In response, Orbán’s
propaganda machine branded his critics child abusers.
The
contradiction of preaching child protection while presiding over a flawed state
that fails to protect children is glaring. Hungary’s underfunded and
dysfunctional institutions have allowed child abuse to continue for years,
unchecked. Orbán’s authoritarian state fosters intimidation and impunity,
undermining accountability and independent media. Journalists’ phones have been
hacked with the military-grade spyware Pegasus, and there are regular smear
campaigns against them.
But this
case also offers a glimmer of hope. In light of the shrinking space for free
media, it is all the more important to highlight the role of the few remaining
independent outlets. From reporting on the child abuse victims to digging up
the pardon itself and diligently following the unfolding case, Hungarian
journalists have provided an immense service to the public. Opposition parties
have amplified the case and taken to the streets to push for accountability.
The most
pressing questions remain unanswered. Orbán has distanced himself from Novák
and tried to shift blame. But nothing happens in the country without his
approval: it was his appointee and close ally who granted this shameful pardon,
and his government member who signed off on it. Along with Novák and Varga, his
hideous regime needs to go.
Katalin
Cseh is a Hungarian member of the European parliament for the Renew Europe
Group
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