Hungary is taking over the secretarial duties of the Geneva Consensus Declaration from Brazil, organisers told a conference on the second anniversary of the founding of the cooperation aiming to help women and the family.
At the conference held in the US Senate building in Washington, DC, Szabolcs Takács, Hungary’s Ambassador to the US, said Hungary had been proud to join the initiative “representing the most important values”.
Hungary’s Fundamental Law, adopted in 2011, sees marriage and the family as the foundation of the nation’s survival, he said. Protection of life, the family, and the nation are central elements of the Fundamental Law, he said.
Read alsoPresident addresses Brazilian literary academy
In a statement to public media after the conference, Takács said Hungarian family policy is seen as an “example to be followed” by an increasing number of US conservatives.
The Geneva Consensus Declaration, aiming to protect families and women, was initiated by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during Donald Trump’s presidency and adopted in October 2020. It currently has 37 signatories. The Biden administration later withdrew the US from the initiative.
Read also Hungary birth rate growth highest in EU!
Source: MTI
please make a donation here
Hot news
Surprising turn: The most expensive street in Hungary was at Lake Balaton instead of Budapest in 2023
MÁV imposes extraordinary order due to brutal snowfall in Hungary
Aeroplex inaugurates aviation components repair base near Budapest Airport
Hungarian far-right Mi Hazánk protests against inviting Israeli PM Netanyahu after ICC arrest warrant
“It was a deliberate and violent murder” – Parents of murdered American woman share update
Median wage shockingly low, half of the Hungarians get less than EUR 875/month net
2 Comments
WOW- what happened to -far right Nazis as usually identified./
Upon seeing Ambassador Takács’ name, I wonder what kind of a reaction would there be in the U.S. if he were to meet with the justices of the Supreme Court. Of one thing I’m sure, it would certainly not create a stir like Ambassador Pressmen’s meeting with Hungary’s justices.