Orbán’s political director: Hungarian presidency aims to get EU ‘off the ground’
Hungary wants its presidency of the Council of the European Union to be a period that serves to restore the EU and gets it “off the ground”, Balázs Orbán, the prime minister’s political director, said in an interview with public radio broadcast on Sunday.
Hungary’s EU presidency is an opportunity that must be seized to make Europe stronger and to represent the country’s national interest better at EU level, Orbán said on Kossuth Radio.
He noted that Prime Minister Viktor Orbán was consulting with the leaders of the most important EU member states ahead of the start of the presidency on July 1, paying visits to Rome, Paris, and Berlin to inform the heads of state and government there about the program of the presidency and to seek political support. Those visits show that many are counting on the Hungarian presidency to set a new direction for the EU, he added.
He acknowledged differences with other European leaders on some issues, but said Hungary had been given a “clear mandate” in the June 9 elections on the future they wanted for Europe.
He added that the program of the Hungarian presidency has been prepared to allow cooperation between all member states on related issues.
“The priorities of the presidency all aim to strengthen Europe again, to make Europe great again, which is also the presidency’s slogan,”
he said. He added that Hungary could count on high-profile politicians in Europe to support the Hungarian presidency, because everybody was interested in the renewal of Europe.
He said Hungary has gained a lot of experience in the past five years on what doesn’t work and why. Hungary’s approaches are innovative and take into account divergent interests; it knows how to reach compromises on EU decision-making, as it has suffered much because of the application of double standards.
The Hungarian presidency could play a constructive role in building relationships between European institutions and a potential new presidential administration in the United States if the Republicans return to power, he said.
Addressing ties with Germany, Orbán said Hungary and Germany saw the future of Europe in the shifting world order in “very similar” terms. “We want a open Europe that fosters more intense economic ties with the rest of the world,” he added.
He pointed to the challenge of reversing the decline in competitiveness because of Brussels’ “failed policies”. He said all sides could agree on making it easier for European companies to do business and on a financial system that supported, not held back, economic growth.
He said that member states were impacted differently by illegal migration and said Hungary didn’t want the kinds of integration problems in some of its peers. He expressed hope that all EU member states would understand that more illegal migrants couldn’t be allowed into Europe and could reach a consensus on the related foreign policy, regulation and financing.
He conceded that the bureaucracy in Brussels remained pro-migration and said Hungary would face that “headwind” with the cooperation of other member states that wanted to stop illegal migration.
He warned that the politicians responsible for the past five years of failed EU policy now wanted to exclude right-wing forces from any cooperation. Hungary will work to advance cooperation with right-wing forces that made recent election gains, he said, adding that Italy and France would be of “key importance” in that respect.
As we wrote earlier, PM Orbán’s political director says the parties that won this European Parliament election have actually lost, details HERE.
read also:
- PM Orbán shed tears on stage, his Peace March ruled Budapest – PHOTO GALLERY, VIDEO
please make a donation here
Hot news
Have you ever heard the story or seen the statue of Prince Buda and Princess Pest? – PHOTOS
Hungary proud on scientists, increased R+D sector funding significantly
American teacher faces expulsion from Hungary after a 10-year career in Budapest
Orbán cabinet sticks to economic neutrality, refuses to join blocks, finance minister Varga said
Trump appoints former PM Orbán advisor Gorka as his counter-terrorism chief but Orbán can’t be glad
Considerable financial support for Hungarians living in Ukraine, says Speaker Kövér
1 Comment
How can anyone take seriously Fidesz statements to get the EU “off the ground” after they have spent the last 14 years putting Hungary “in the ground” with the lowest standard of living and highest corruption in the EU?