Occupy Brussels!
Viktor Orbán’s
plan for Europe
In the Hungarian leader, the EU faces a new type of
Euroskeptic, one who doesn’t want to leave the bloc but shape it.
By SUZANNE
LYNCH
https://www.politico.eu/article/viktor-orban-plan-europe-hungary-council-presidency-election/
Photo-illustrations
by Tarini Sharma for POLITICO
APRIL 8,
2024 4:02 AM CET
Hungary, in
Viktor Orbán’s words, is preparing for war.
“We need to
go deeper, occupy positions, gather allies and fix the European Union,” the
60-year-old Hungarian prime minister declared in an interview at the end of
last year. “It’s not enough to be angry. We need to take over Brussels.”
Orbán has
long railed against the EU, using it as a scapegoat to rile up populist support
and casting his country’s relationship with Brussels as an us-versus-them
battle to hammer home a right-wing ideology grounded in nationalism and
traditional family values.
But in
recent years — and in particular since his reelection for a fifth term in April
2022 — there’s been a shift in Orbán’s tone and a change in his approach to the
EU.
In the
Hungarian leader, the EU faces a new type of Euroskeptic, one who doesn’t want
to leave the bloc but instead shape it, putting his stamp on policies from
support to Ukraine to the fight against climate change to migration.
Orbán has
poured money and resources into Brussels, erecting the infrastructure to shape
the conversation in the EU capital as he prepares to take on the bloc’s
rotating presidency in July on the heels of an expected right-wing surge in
June’s European Parliament election.
“If we want
to retain Hungary’s freedom and sovereignty, we must occupy Brussels and bring
change to the European Union,” Orbán declared at a rally in Budapest to mark
Hungary’s national day on March 15.
Zsuzsanna
Szelenyi, a former ally turned critic of Orbán and author of “Tainted
Democracy,” said the prime minister’s efforts to shape the political debate in
Europe — and forge connections with like-minded conservatives in the United
States — reflects the self-confidence of a leader who no longer faces
significant opposition in Budapest, having been reelected in 2022 with a
two-thirds majority in the Hungarian parliament.
While Orbán
has a new challenger in the form of Péter Magyar, a former official from the
Hungarian leader’s Fidesz party, it’s not clear yet whether the upstart will
prove to be a serious threat. Meanwhile, Orbán is under pressure from Brussels,
where EU leaders have threatened to cut off funding over concerns about
democracy and freedom of the press in Hungary.
“Orbán
doesn’t have to worry about losing power at home because he has amassed huge
power,” Szelenyi said. “His aim is now wider than Hungary. This has been pretty
obvious for a while. He wants to not only protect his regime in Hungary but to
influence political culture in Europe. Brussels is the cornerstone of this.”
Hungary’s soft power offensive in Brussels
In downtown
Brussels, around the corner from the American and Russian diplomatic missions,
a legion of builders is hard at work.
The
Hungarian government is racing to complete renovations on a vast 18th-century
mansion it bought in 2021 in time for July when Budapest assumes the rotating
presidency of the Council of the EU, the institution where diplomats, ministers
and technical advisers meet to set the bloc’s policy.
The new
space — the mansion previously housed the Belgian Ministry of Finance — will
complement the existing Hungarian embassies to the EU and Belgium and act as a
meeting point and venue for cultural events, said Hungary’s ambassador to
Belgium and Luxembourg, Tamás Iván Kovács.
“We’re
proud of being one of the oldest countries in Europe, more than 1,000 years of
history with a very rich and very unique culture,” he said, name-checking
composers like Franz Liszt and Béla Bartók and Hungarian Nobel prize winners
and literary greats.
The
mansion, which Hungarian officials are already referring to as “Hungary House,”
is just the latest addition to Budapest’s growing soft-power offensive in
Brussels.
Leading the
country’s ideological assault is the Mathias Corvinus Collegium (commonly
referred to as MCC), an Orbán-backed think tank. The government-affiliated
organization opened a branch in Brussels in 2022, offering an unapologetically
conservative take on EU affairs as it seeks to disrupt the Brussels think tank
circuit.
The
Brussels branch, with a staff of about 20, is an offshoot of a privately funded
educational foundation based in Budapest, which was granted €1.4 billion by the
Hungarian state during the COVID pandemic — just as Budapest was tightening the
screws on other academic organizations in the country, including the George
Soros-backed Central European University.
To imbue
the next generation of Hungarian luminaries with conservative values, the
organization gives children, often from poor backgrounds, scholarships to
attend centers across Hungary, where they partake in extra-curricular
activities and education.
“There is a
chance that they are going to be among the next generation leaders of Hungary,
not just in the political realm, but in the spheres of culture, economy,
business,” said Balázs Orbán, a top adviser (but no relation) to the Hungarian
prime minister and the driving force behind MCC.
At a recent
MCC event in Brussels, young staffers from the European Parliament mingled with
representatives from EU countries, as they heard from various right-wing
speakers on the rise of populism.
The aim of
the association, director Frank Furedi told attendees, was to provide people
with the “intellectual resources” to counter a dominant culture that wants to
“shove gender politics down our throat” and “destroy our past.”
Previous
gatherings have zoned in on hot-button issues, like farmer protests against the
EU’s green agenda. A recent report, “How did LGBTQ take over the EU?” argues
that “the issue of sexual rights has been weaponized to demonize EU Member
States of Central and Eastern Europe.” On April 9, the group will present a
report warning about efforts to create “a United States of Europe.”
“This event
will be an occasion ‘to kick up a fuss’ and reveal what the EU elites have been
doing — both in plain sight and also behind the back of European people,” the
group announced.
Balázs
Orbán says MCC will offer a more conservative take on EU politics and
philosophy — something that has been lacking since Britain’s exit from the
European Union. “Everybody may say there is full agreement about the strategic
direction of Europe, but that is not true,” he said. “Our aim is to influence
the European debate.”
Budapest is
also funding The European Conservative, an English-language magazine and
website putting a conservative slant on EU news, through the nonprofit
Batthyány Lajos Foundation.
“We have a
lot to be proud of,” said Kovács, the Hungarian ambassador. “It’s important
that we have a way of communicating this directly. Unfortunately, some of the
mainstream coverage is distorting and not telling the full picture.”
Right-wing surge in the European Parliament
Hungary is
eyeing the coming months as a crucial window for political change. In June’s EU
election, citizens across the bloc will choose the 720 members of the European
Parliament and trigger a wider rejigging of the top EU leadership roles across
the bloc.
All signs
point toward a swing to the right. A recent poll for the European Council on
Foreign Relations forecast a right-wing surge in June’s election, with populist
and nationalist parties gaining ground and centrist and left-leaning forces
losing seats — a shift that would coincide with Hungary taking the helm of the
Council of the EU.
“I haven’t
seen such a good opportunity for national, conservative, sovereigntist and
Christian-based forces to become dominant in the European Union in a long
time,” the Hungarian leader said in March. Orbán’s statement was posted on his
social media accounts accompanied by clips of him rubbing shoulders with
right-wing European leaders like Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, French
far-right leader Marine Le Pen and Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico.
“It’s not
an overnight revolution,” he elaborated during an onstage interview at the
Antalya Diplomacy Forum, a Turkish conference on international diplomacy. “But
change could start from June. That’s my hope, and I’m working on this. I [will]
try to play a role to unify the right … and sweep away the socialist, leftist,
progressive, liberal dangerous guys.”
As part of
his effort to “unify the right,” Orbán has been in search of allies. His Fidesz
party has been politically homeless since leaving the center-right European
People’s Party (EPP) in 2021, but speculation is rife that it will seek to join
the right-wing European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR), a more conservative
political family in which Italy’s Meloni is the heaviest hitter.
Though the
far-right Sweden Democrats and the Czech Civic Democrats have threatened to
quit the political family if Fidesz is admitted — over Hungary’s persistent
reluctance to support Ukraine — bigger beasts in the ECR jungle such as
Poland’s Law and Justice party are open to it. Polls predict that if Fidesz
were to join, the ECR could become the third-largest group in the European
Parliament after June’s election.
Orbán has
said that Meloni is also on board. The Italian leader has emerged as an Orbán
whisperer in recent months, convincing him to back a funding plan for Ukraine
at an EU summit.
In a sign
of ever closer ties, the Hungarian leader flew into Brussels a day before
another meeting of EU leaders last month to present the co-president of the ECR
in the European Parliament, the Polish academic Ryszard Legutko, with an award
for “the protection of European values and freedom.”
Orbán’s vision for Europe
So what
does Orbán want?
Most of the
time the Hungarian leader and those around him frame their ambitions in the
negative: railing against bureaucracy, migrants, the “LGBTQ agenda” and
assistance for Kyiv in its war against Russia.
What they
don’t do is suggest Hungary should leave the EU.
“You can
take a simplistic approach and suggest that Hungary is against the European
effort, but take a look at reality,” said Zoltán Kovács, the international
spokesman for the Hungarian government. “Hungary is with the European
mainstream on agendas basically 85 to 90 percent of the time.”
Support for
the EU remains high in Hungary — and Orbán knows it. The European Commission’s
regular Eurobarometer survey consistently finds Hungarian support for EU
membership at well above 50 percent. A recent survey found that 72 percent
believed EU membership is a good thing.
“Orbán can
criticize the European Union,” said András Bíró-Nagy, director of Policy
Solutions, a Budapest-based think tank. “He can say it is going in the wrong
direction, but he cannot play with Hungary’s EU membership. That’s a red line
even for his own Fidesz voters.”
So rather
than wanting to leave the EU, Orbán and his allies insist it must be reshaped,
with more power given to national governments (sovereigntism, in their
parlance) and less to the institutions in Brussels.
“Sovereignty
is the main idea,” said Balázs Orbán. “We need someone who is representing the
idea of individual national member states cooperating — not a federal
superstructure. That was in fact central to the idea of the EU at the
beginning.”
The best
guide to the Hungarian vision for Europe may be the vetoes Budapest has
deployed in Brussels. Many EU decisions require the consensus of the bloc’s 27
countries, and Orbán has not shied from withholding his, even in the face of
pressure from other leaders. He has used his effective veto to block everything
from sanctions on Russia to an EU position on global taxation to funding for
Ukraine.
Many times,
Orbán has blocked or held up decisions to extract concessions, but he has also
deployed his veto — sometimes at the eleventh hour — in the name of the
principle that countries should have more control over what goes on within
their borders.
A case in
point is the recent Nature Restoration Law, a key part of the EU’s Green Deal
agenda designed to protect biodiversity that has fallen foul of farmers. During
negotiations between EU institutions, Hungary supported the bill — but on the
eve of the final negotiation, Budapest announced it would oppose the law, over
what it says are legitimate concerns from farmers in other parts of Europe and
claiming Brussels wants to set “irrational targets” motivated by a “green
ideology.”
Orbán’s
frequent use of the unanimity rules has led to calls, most notably from France
and Germany, to remove them in certain areas of EU decision-making, like
foreign policy.
Budapest
has sworn to oppose such a move. Hungarians “don’t like being dictated to,”
said Balázs Orbán, citing — as many government officials do — a kind of
Hungarian exceptionalism built on centuries of history and resistance.
“I don’t
see any willingness in Hungary to give up any more sovereignty, either in
foreign policy or even the joint loan projects,” he added. “You’re losing your
sovereignty step by step. We want to stop this never-ending federalization.”
As Hungary
prepares to take the helm of the Council of the EU for six months starting in
July, many in Brussels are expecting a bumpy ride.
The holder
of the rotating presidency is supposed to be an “honest broker” and set aside
their national interests, but few believe Orbán won’t use the opportunity to
tilt things in his direction.
Perhaps
unsurprisingly given Budapest’s battle against the EU’s migration policy,
Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó has said the issue will be a focus
of the country’s presidency. Speaking alongside his Austrian counterpart
earlier this year Szijjártó said that “a sharp political change is needed in
Brussels so that the European Union does not attract, but stops illegal
migrants.”
Orbán noted that Hungary’s EU presidency will overlap
with the U.S. presidential election.
Another
priority will be enlargement, but on Hungary’s terms. While Budapest is
expected to advance this file — a key strategic focus for the EU since Russia’s
full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 — it will focus on the aspirations of
the countries in the Western Balkans rather than Ukraine, whose entry into the
bloc it opposes.
Also
significant is what Hungary will omit from its list of priorities. With Orbán
seizing on the recent farmers’ protests as a sign of popular discontent with
Brussels’ green policies, EU officials don’t expect an emphasis on climate
during Hungary’s tenure.
Then
there’s the issue of the rule of law. The European Commission has been
withholding EU funds from Budapest as it tussles with Orbán over concerns he
undermined the country’s judiciary, media and democratic standards. The
European Parliament has passed a resolution questioning whether Hungary’s
presidency should take place at all.
Not only is
Orbán unlikely to pay the Parliament any heed. All indications are that he will
relish his role, which — in addition to allowing him to put his stamp on EU
policy — will provide him with a place on the global stage.
In stark
opposition to the positions taken by his fellow EU leaders, the Hungarian
leader has cozied up to the American conservative TV host Tucker Carlson,
cheered former U.S. President Donald Trump’s bid for reelection and
congratulated Russian President Vladimir Putin on his obviously rigged election
victory. Chinese President Xi Jinping has called Orbán Beijing’s “friend.”
In his
annual speech to the Hungarian parliament in February, Orbán noted that
Hungary’s EU presidency will overlap with the U.S. presidential election.
“Make
Europe Great Again!” he declared. “Over there MAGA, over here MEGA.”
“Real
change can be brought about by a new European right, of which we Hungarians are
a part,” he added. “Down with Brussels. Long live Europe!”


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