United States

Government official: Orbán, Trump adhere to same values, interests

trump orbán 2024

Adhering to the same conservative values could further strengthen cooperation between the Hungarian prime minister and Donald Trump, Zoltán Kovács, state secretary for international communication and relations, said on Monday, after Viktor Orbán meets with the former US president and Republican presidential candidate, in Florida on the weekend.

Those shared values include their commitment to peace, their approach to migration and the LGBTQ issue, the “sanctity of the family”, and their economic policy, Kovács told public news channel M1 on Monday morning.

He said Trump had proven as president that he was “the president of peace,” who, if elected, would urge peaceful solutions to the wars and conflicts.

Concerning the war in Ukraine, Kovács noted that Trump, just like the Hungarian government, had been an advocate for peace ever since the war broke out with Russia.

Commenting on incumbent US President Joe Biden’s remark that Trump was meeting a politician who “doesn’t think democracy works,” Kovács noted that Hungarian-US relations “work well”, adding that economic cooperation, Hungary’s commitment and its performance of responsibilities as a NATO member were “flawless”.

“The [current] ideology-driven US administration does not respect the opinion and the will of the Hungarian people,” he said.

Speaking to public broadcaster Kossuth Radio’s morning programme, Kovács said that “as Hungary is in the fourteenth year of a model change, the country now gets a lot more attention in the international press and in the United States”. Commenting on the Hungarian prime minister’s meeting with Donald Trump in Mar-a-Lago on Friday, Kovács said “the quality of personal relationships is highly important in politics”. Details HERE: Orbán and Trump: peacemakers meeting in Mar-a-Lago, Florida – PHOTOS, VIDEO

  • read also: Would the majority of Hungarians be happy if Trump won? – Survey

Hungarian FM to Breitbart: Trump presidency will ensure ‘new world order’ of global ‘peace, stability’

trump szijjártó us hungary foreign minister

The world “needs President Trump to win” this coming election because only a “strong” American leader can offer “stability and security to the international order”, the Hungarian foreign minister said in an interview with the website of Breitbart News.

In the interview published on Sunday, Péter Szijjártó said that if Donald Trump was elected in November, he would be able to make peace between Russia and Ukraine.

“Without President Trump on board, this war will continue for a long time, resulting in many more casualties and culminating in much destruction,” the minister said. “So our foremost hope is that in the case that President Trump wins the 2024 election, he can make peace.”

“We Hungarians give our full support to that as one of the very few countries in Europe which is pro-peace,” he added. “You have to understand that the majority of countries in Europe are pro-war, and just a tiny minority are pro-peace.”

Szijjártó said that if Trump’s “pro-peace policies” take effect, “then some of those European countries might change their positions as well”.

He said there was “no battlefield solution” to the war in Ukraine, adding that the battlefield “can only offer casualties and destruction — not a solution.”

Szijjártó said it was generally acknowledged that Ukraine would not defeat Russia, adding, at the same time, that “we also know that Russia cannot win against the entire west” either.

Concerning the war in Gaza, he said European countries applied “double standards” to Israel.

“[We] Believe that it must not be forgotten how this conflict started,” Szijjártó said. “There was a brutal, heinous terrorist attack taking place against Israel, with the firing of thousands of rockets into the country, the killing of over a thousand people, and the kidnapping of hundreds more.”

He said Israel’s military offensive against Hamas was of vital importance not just for the security of the Jewish state, but for global security as well, to prevent similar attacks across the globe.

The interview was made after Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán along with Szijjártó as member of his delegation travelled to Florida to meet the former US president. We wrote about this meeting here: Orbán and Trump: peacemakers meeting in Mar-a-Lago, Florida – PHOTOS, VIDEO

Hungary “has many friends” in the United States, Balázs Orbán, the prime minister’s political director, said in an interview to public radio on Sunday, in connection with Viktor Orbán’s meeting with Donald Trump in the former US president’s residence Mar-a-Lago, in Florida, details HERE.

Sensational news! A Hungarian among the Oscars 2024 winners

oscar

Hungary’s Zsuzsa Mihalek has won the 2024 Academy Award (Oscars) for Production Design.

Mihalek won the acknowledgement for set decoration, along with James Price and Shona Heath for production design, for their work on director Yorgos Lanthimos’s feature Poor Things.

Poor Things, filmed at Origo Studios in Budapest, won four Oscars at the awards ceremony in Hollywood on Sunday: in addition to the nod for production design, it won the Oscar for Best Actress, Best Costume Design and Best Makeup and Hairstyling.

As we wrote earlier, this year, Mihalek won the British Film Prize, the BAFTA, for her work on Poor Things, but was not in London to receive the award. She was not there in Los Angeles for the Oscars either. Price and Heath mentioned that they missed “Zsuzsi” not being there.

 

In eight years, Zsuzsa Mihalek is the fourth Hungarian filmmaker to be honoured by the US Film Academy. In 2016, László Nemes Jeles received the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film for Son of Saul, Kristóf Deák won the Best Live Action Short Film category for With Everyone in 2017, and Zsuzsanna Sipos received the Golden Statue for her work as the director of the first part of Denis Villeneuve’s Dune in 2022.

Zsuzsa Mihalek began her career as a set designer in the 1980s, working on films such as Csinibaba and Argo. She has also worked on several productions shot in Hungary and contributed to a number of films internationally.

  • read also: You would not believe these world-famous celebrities have Hungarian origins, read here

Orbán’s political director: Hungary has many friends in the USA

Hungary has many friends in the USA

Hungary “has many friends” in the United States, Balázs Orbán, the prime minister’s political director, said in an interview to public radio on Sunday, in connection with Viktor Orbán’s meeting with Donald Trump in the former US president’s residence Mar-a-Lago, in Florida.

He said it was an honour for the Hungarian delegation to be hosted by the Republican Party’s presidential candidate in his own home. Peace had endured in many parts of the world while Trump was president, including in the Middle East and Ukraine, he said. Hungary wants a ceasefire and peace talks, the political director said, adding that President Biden’s “liberal US administration thinks differently”.

He added that the world and Europe would be best served if Trump returned to the White House and then established peace. US-Russia talks could end the war with the involvement of Europe and the Ukrainians as well as possible third parties. “But America’s stance on the matter is decisive,” he said.

Trump, he said, had warned about the mounting danger of nuclear confrontation, insisting that the US should try to do “something radically different”. Orbán said a ceasefire would open up an opportunity to resolve the security relationship between the West, NATO and Russia in the long run. While not easy, “the sooner we start, the more lives we can save”, he said.

Hungary is model for many Republicans

The political director said the Biden administration had shown Hungary “ideological hostility”, even though Hungary was a good NATO ally which spent well above 2 percent of GDP on defence policy and contributed to numerous alliance missions. He insisted that “circles connected to the Democrats finance the Hungarian left”, adding that Biden’s administration was on the wrong side of the Hungarian government and Hungarian people’s opinion.

Many Republicans, on the other hand, saw Hungary as a model and an important European ally, he said. Europe, Orbán said, should be an interlocutor to both the current and future leaders of the United States. Western politicians, encouraged by Donald Trump’s stance, were increasingly speaking in favour of peace, and this was in the interest of all Hungarians, he said.

Read also:

  • Biden scares democracy supporters with Orbán while Trump calls Hungary’s strongman best, smartest – Read more HERE
  • Orbán and Trump: peacemakers meeting in Mar-a-Lago, Florida – PHOTOS, VIDEO and details in THIS article

Biden scares democracy supporters with Orbán while Trump calls Hungary’s strongman best, smartest

Trump Orbán

“No one is better, smarter or a better leader than Viktor Orbán,” former US President Donald Trump has said.

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán published the video of Trump’s remarks on his Facebook page on Saturday, together with a comment: “Thank you, Mr President!”

Orban met Trump on Friday in the former president’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida. Talks were followed by a dinner and concert.

In the video recorded at the concert, Trump said: “No one is better, smarter or a better leader than Viktor Orbán. He’s fantastic”.

“He’s a non-controversial figure because he says: ‘This is the way it’s gonna be,’ and that’s the end of it. Right? He’s the boss. No, he’s a great leader.”

“Viktor is a Great Leader, respected all over the World,” Trunp said in a post on his messaging platform.

According to Politico, Joe Biden also mentioned the Trump-Orbán summit in one of his speeches. “You know who he’s meeting with today down in Mar-a-Lago? Orbán of Hungary, who’s stated flatly that he doesn’t thinks democracy works, he’s looking for dictatorship”, Biden said.“I see a future where we defend democracy, not diminish it,” he added.

Read also:

  • PM Orbán: Trump ‘is name of peace’ – Read more HERE

PM Orbán: Trump ‘is name of peace’

Orbán and Trump

After meeting the former president of the United States, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán declared Donald Trump “the president of peace” who “commanded respect around the world and established conditions for peace”.

Peace endured in the Middle East in Ukraine while Trump was president, Orbán said in video released to MTI on Saturday. “If he were still the president of the United States, there would be no war today,” he said.

He said peace would emerge when world leaders were around who wanted peace. “I’m proud that Hungary is among such countries.”

The prime minister said opportunities abounded in US-Hungary economic relations, and while trade turnover has topped 9 billion US dollars, “we don’t want to stop there”.

He said “when Trump returns” to the White House, “we’ll reinvigorate US-Hungarian trade ties”.

Orbán noted that the election campaign in America was “going full steam ahead”, and it was up to Americans to come to their own decision, though Hungarians could “honestly admit that it would be better for the world and Hungary if President Donald Trump were to return.”

Read also:

  • Orbán and Trump: peacemakers meeting in Mar-a-Lago, Florida – PHOTOS, VIDEO and details in THIS article
  • Would the majority of Hungarians be happy if Trump won? – HERE is a survey

Orbán and Trump: peacemakers meeting in Mar-a-Lago, Florida – PHOTOS, VIDEO

Orbán and Trump

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is meeting former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump for talks at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Friday, the PM’s press chief said.

The Hungarian delegation headed by Orbán arrived at Mar-a-Lago at 5pm local time, and are scheduled to have an hour-long meeting with Trump and his team, Bertalan Havasi told MTI. The talks will be followed by a dinner and a concert, he said.

Orbán and Trump
Orbán and Trump in Mar-a-Lago. Photo: MTI

 

The name for peace is Trump, PM Orbán’s video says:

FM Szijjártó: ‘Trump as strong US president would guarantee stability of global security’

Having a strong president in the White House always ensures a form of stability for global security, Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Friday ahead of Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s meeting with Donald Trump in Florida, adding that if Trump returned, the United States could again be led by a strong president.

Orbán is set to meet the former US president in Palm Beach later in the day which will be their third bilateral meeting. The foreign ministry cited Szijjártó as saying that the substantial lead Trump established in the Republican primaries this week practically guaranteed his nomination for the November election.

“So we can say that our prime minister will soon be meeting the Republican challenger [to the Democratic presidential candidate],” Szijjártó said.

Szijjártó said he was convinced that had Donald Trump been elected US president in 2020, the war in Ukraine would not have happened, and the conflict in the Middle East could be resolved much faster.

He underscored that Hungary-US relations were at their peak when Trump was the president of the United States.

Meanwhile, Szijjártó said he will hold talks on boosting bilateral economic ties, underlining the importance of cooperation with Florida.

He said he will meet with the head of the recently established Hungarian Chamber of Business and Commerce in Florida as well as representatives of electronics maker Jabil, which employs 4,000 people in Hungary.

Other Florida-based businesses also have significant investments in Hungary, he said, adding that the Hungarian Chamber of Business and Commerce could be of help to the several Hungarian companies interested in entering the Florida market.

The minister said that if Florida were an independent state, it would be the world’s 14th largest economy, adding that this made cooperation with the state important. Trade turnover between Hungary and Florida came to 300 million US dollars last year, he said.

Szijjártó also mentioned Hungary’s cooperation with Florida in sports, noting the rising popularity of teqball, a Hungarian invention, in the state.

Orbán held panel discussion in Washington before

The US Heritage Foundation, a conservative think-tank, on Thursday hosted a panel discussion entitled “The Future of Relations between the United States and Hungary” with Prime Minister Viktor Orbán as a guest participant, the PM’s press chief said.

Orbán held the panel discussion with Kevin Roberts, the think-tank’s president, and the audience included renowned US right wing politicians, analysts and public personalities, Bertalan Havasi said. The programme was introduced by Vivek Ramaswamy, a US conservative politician, commentator and former Republican presidential candidate.

Orbán and Trump
Panel discussion in Washington. Photo: MTI

The participants said the world needed a new movement to fight for justice, tradition, families and ordinary people.

At the event held behind closed doors, Orbán was asked about the successes of Hungary’s conservative family and economic policies, the war in Ukraine, US-Hungary relations, President Donald Trump, and his personal political beliefs.

After the programme, Orbán met Steve Bannon, US media personality, political strategist and Trump’s former advisor, at the Hungarian embassy in Washington, DC.

Orbán and Trump
Orbán and Steve Bannon. Photo: MTI

Read also:

  • Would the majority of Hungarians be happy if Trump won? – Survey results HERE
  • Trump ‘guarantee of peace, good Hungary-US relations’, says Hungarian foreign minister in NY

Hungarian minister warns against American, Chinese expansion in the electric vehicle sector

Hungarian minister warns against American, Chinese expansion in the electric vehicle sector

Márton Nagy, the national economy minister, held talks in Brussels on Thursday with Martin Kocher, his Austrian counterpart, in preparation for Hungary’s upcoming EU presidency, the ministry said in a statement.

Nagy and Kocher were in agreement that trade relations between Hungary and Austria were strong, and they discussed challenges related to the green transition and electric vehicle production, the statement said.

Austria has been Hungary’s third most important trading partner in recent years, and Austrian companies are the second biggest group of investors in the country, Nagy said.

He called for maximising every possible means to boost the European Union’s competitiveness and develop its industry, highlighting electric vehicle production and artificial intelligence as key sectors. The number of EVs reached 14 million in 2023, 58 percent of which were sold in China, he said, adding that the US EV market was also surging, while the EU was falling behind.

Nagy said Europe needed to take steps to boost its EV sector by launching an EU-wide scheme to promote the adoption of electric vehicles. He said Europe needed to dedicate itself to supporting the EV sector instead of a “general and ideological approach” to the green and digital transition.

Making Europe the leader in electric vehicle production and maintaining its competitiveness against the American and Chinese expansion in the sector was a shared interest, the ministry said, adding that Nagy had asked Kocher to support speeding up the green transition in the interest of Europe’s competitiveness.

Read also:

  • Number of green vehicles up five fold in the last few years – Read more HERE
  • Tesla to launch mobile service in Hungary – Details in THIS article

Hungarian government wants the EU to continue opening towards Eastern markets

China Hungary finance investments

The European Union’s competitiveness must be boosted and red tape cut in the bloc in the coming years, the national economy minister told a meeting of the European Union’s Competitiveness Council in Brussels on Thursday.

According to a ministry statement, Márton Nagy told the meeting that the bloc’s competitiveness should be lifted by implementing the green and digital transition, by opening towards Eastern as well as Western markets, and by consistently cutting red tape.

He said the EU had been losing its competitiveness for decades, a trend worsened by the recent spike in energy prices and the crises and protectionist measures in the US and China.

Regarding a European Commission proposal before the European Council on capping payment deadlines related to commercial transactions between businesses, requiring a mandatory payment deadline of no more than 30, Nagy said that a Hungarian survey found that about one quarter of companies would have difficulties complying. Many fear the step would benefit third-country competitors, he said.

Regarding the European agenda for tourism, Nagy said the most important task of the Hungarian tourism sector would be digitalisation to the highest possible degree. By creating a national tourism data service centre, Hungary has been among the first to make the sector’s performance measurable, he said. Its tourism strategy is also being amended to accommodate sustainability and green transition goals, he said.

Read also:

  • Astonishing hotel to open in wondrous environment in Budapest’s Buda Hills – Read more HERE
  • 5+1 exciting travel destinations in Hungary – Details in THIS article

Orbán in Washington and he took the ratification documents for Sweden’s NATO accession, so Sweden became a member

Orbán in Washington and he took the ratification documents for Sweden's NATO accession

The ratification documents for Sweden’s NATO accession have been submitted at the US department of state, the foreign minister said after personally taking the documents to Washington, DC, and then phoning his Swedish counterpart on Thursday.

The ministry cited Péter Szijjártó as saying that Hungary’s parliament recently approved Sweden’s NATO accession, an important precondition for which was to rebuild trust between Hungary and Sweden. “The prime ministers of both countries have done much work for this, among others, by expanding a defence cooperation agreement, which provided a sufficient basis for carrying things forward,” he added.

Szijjártó said he instructed the Hungary’s ambassador to Washington, Szabolcs Takács, to deliver the ratification documents to the US department of state, which happened at 2pm local time. “As a result, we have finished all the work necessary for Sweden to become a NATO member”.

He added that Swedish counterpart Tobias Billstrom had expressed thanks and the two were in agreement that there was an opportunity to give new impetus to bilateral relations, which would serve the interests of both sides.

According to 24.hu, Swedish prime minister Ulf Kristersson submitted the Swedish ratification documents later yesterday in the presence of US secretary Antony Blinken. As a result, Sweden became the 32nd member of the military alliance.

Read also:

  • Hungary does not support Mark Rutte as NATO Secretary General – Read more HERE
  • Hungarian Parliament votes in favour, Sweden to join NATO

FM Szijjártó on Trump: Liberal mainstream failed its master plan to disqualify him

orbán and trump

Hungary will provide full support to Bosnia and Herzegovina to move forward its EU integration process, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said after meeting his Bosnian counterpart in Budapest on Wednesday. He also talked about Donald Trump.

At a joint press conference with Elmedin Konakovic, Szijjártó said that in Hungary’s standpoint “the European Union these days needs the integration of the Western Balkan countries more than they need EU membership”.

He said that an action plan was signed on “sharing knowledge” on the integration process with Bosnia and Herzegovina which had submitted its application for membership 8 years ago. “It is now time to make real progress,” Szijjártó added. Under the plan, 50 experts will participate in training at the Hungarian Diplomatic Academy who are potential candidates to play a key role in Bosnia-Herzegovina’s EU accession talks.

Speeding up the EU integration of the Western Balkans and moving forward with Bosnia-Herzegovina’s accession talks will be an important objective of Hungary’s upcoming EU presidency in the second half of 2024, said Szijjártó.

Szijjártó on Trump

Answering a question in connection with the US presidential elections and the US Supreme Court’s decision clearing Donald Trump to run for president, Szijjártó welcomed “the failure of the liberal mainstream’s master plan” to disqualify a non-liberal candidate standing a good chance to win and that the Democrats will have to compete against Donald Trump “in a democratic race”.

Donald Trump Viktor Orbán
Photo: FB/OrbánViktor

“This is a very important victory from the point of view of the rule of law,” Szijjártó said, adding that it was regrettable that no statements had been made by Brussels this time on “how it was a violation of the rule of law and European values – which we regard as universal values – that a decision on who can or cannot run as a candidate in the primaries, or in the presidential election, could have been taken by an official in a certain American state”.

“But this is their business…., what is certain is that we have always respected decisions made by the people of other countries concerning who they elect for leaders, including in the United States,” Szijjarto said.

The foreign minister said Hungary’s bilateral relations had been at their peak during the presidency of Donald Trump, adding that Hungary would again like to have “the best ever” political relations with the United States.

Read also:

Would the majority of Hungarians be happy if Trump won? – Survey

trump

In total, 51 percent of all respondents in a recent survey by Real-PR 93 believe that Hungary would benefit if Donald Trump won the November US presidential election, the pollster said in a statement on Tuesday.

Among right-wing supporters, 78 percent said they would welcome a Trump victory, while 26 percent of leftist respondents shared that opinion.

Twenty-three percent of all respondents said Hungary would benefit from Joe Biden’s re-election.

Real-PR 93 has gauged Hungarian voters’ support for Trump for the second time, the first one conducted in October-November last year. The first survey indicated 47 percent support for Trump, the report said, adding that the ratio could further increase in future.

The pollster said support for Trump was higher among older respondents, with 47 percent in the 18-39 age group, 49 percent among the middle-aged and 58 percent among people over 60.

The survey was conducted by phone with a sample of 1,000 adults between Feb 26 and 28.

The Hungarian government and its media are campaigning heavily for Donald Trump. Viktor Orbán makes no secret of the fact that he is clearly interfering in the US election and wants Trump to be president again. “The direct security situation isn’t looking good … and the only sane chance on Hungary’s part is to bet on President Trump’s return,” Orbán said yesterday, details HERE.

Also, we wrote earlier, PM Orbán travels to Florida to meet Trump, Chinese President Xi may visit Budapest, details HERE.

Trump ‘guarantee of peace, good Hungary-US relations’, says Hungarian foreign minister in NY

new york szijjártó

Hungary continues to stand for peace, dialogue, Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister said in New York on Monday, adding that the country opposed all forms of terrorism. He also talked about the US election and a better world if Trump wins.

Hungary has borne the consequences of the war in Ukraine for more than two years and protected the external borders of the European Union against illegal migration, bound “in a vicious circle” with terrorism, Szijjártó told the UN General Assembly, according to a ministry statement.

Given these immediate security challenges, Hungary “is committed to peace, diplomacy, continuous global dialogue, and is against all forms of terrorism,” he said.

He expressed Hungary’s mounting concern over the conflict in the Middle East, saying the longer the conflict lasted, the greater the risk of its spreading. The minister added that Hamas “must be defeated”.

Szijjártó emphasised the importance of preventing the formation of a Lebanese front in the conflict, adding that the Beirut government, which wanted nothing to do with it, deserved maximum support from the international community.

He also said the delivery of humanitarian aid should be guaranteed to ensure that innocent people do not suffer the consequences of the brutal crimes of terrorists, calling on states and international organisations to do whatever possible to achieve this.

The minister praised Egypt in this regard. He also noted that Hungary provided more than 9 million US dollars to support its health system.

On the subject of the hostage situation, he urged the immediate, unconditional release of hostages, and expressed gratitude to Qatar for mediating in the release of three Hungarian hostages. He asked Qatar to carry on its efforts to ensure the quickest possible release of the other hostages.

A sensible agreement was needed between the opposing parties before the start of Ramadan, he added.

Meanwhile, he said Hungary was “a strategic partner of Israel” while also keeping strong ties with Arab countries in the region. “As a responsible country, Hungary is ready to play its part in finding an appropriate solution to security crises worldwide,” he added.

Trump ‘guarantee of peace, good Hungary-US relations’

The Hungarian government wants the world to be more peaceful and Hungarian-US relations should develop in a positive way in the coming period, Szijjártó said in New York on Monday, adding that those goals would be aided by Donald Trump’s return to the White House.

Szijjártó said it was up to the American people to decide on the next US president, according to a ministry statement. “Their choice must be respected…” he said.

“We will try to work together with the president, with the administration that gets elected,” he said. “Even so, our experience was that when Donald Trump was in office, the political part of Hungary-US relations was also at its peak,” he added.

“And when Trump was president, being a strong American leader, he was able to prevent the outbreak of armed conflicts,”

Szijjártó said. Had Trump been the US president, there would be no war now in Ukraine and the crisis in the Middle East could be resolved a lot quicker, he said.

“The name of peace and good Hungarian-American relations is that of Donald Trump,” the foreign minister said.

read also:

Orbán: there must always be an entity between Hungary and Russia 🔄

pm orbán

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has expressed optimism about Hungary’s economic policy for the next two years, saying the conditions for a stable policy were in place.

Hungarian economy

Speaking at an event on Monday organised by the Hungarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MKIK), Orbán said a successful economic policy required competent finance and national economy ministries as well as the backing of a commerce chamber that could cooperate effectively with the government.

He said prime ministers were responsible for making sure that economic policy “remains backed up by simple, common-sense considerations”.

One such principle, he said, was that “it is always better if others owe us than if we owe others”, and it was better to “earn more than you spend … and profit off others than have others profiting off us”.

The prime minister said cooperation between the economy and finance ministries as well as with the chamber all contributed to a stable economic policy.

Orbán noted the government was grappling with “a very high inherited debt rate”, which he said had gone from 52-53 percent to above 80 percent after the 2002 elections. The government had reined it in, he added, but “it went up again after the pandemic”.

“What’s important is that in the end, we’re lenders rather than borrowers,” he said.

Concerning the budget deficit, Orbán said “we are spending more than we earn”, and, referring to employment, he said “if we do not work we will starve to death”. All efforts must be focused on “convincing people that it is worth working”. He said that employment figures reflected the government’s successful policies in this area.

Up to 2020 Hungary was on an upward path, but then the pandemic and the war in Ukraine forced the country to “shift to lower gear” between 2020-2024, Orbán said. Now there was a chance to accelerate in 2024, he said, adding that the real economy had not suffered big problems between 2020-2024 because the government had “allowed people and businesses to make money”.

West and East

The government’s philosophy of building ties across the global economy rather than “translating an economic policy mimicking the West into primitive formulas” had also helped, he said. While the West was “stumbling”, Hungary’s eastern relations “have continued to blossom.”

Hungarian businesses are the fourth largest investor group in their own country, the prime minister said, adding that this was impressive considering “the depths from where they started”.

Meanwhile, Orbán said the economic and political map of the world “is transforming at an accelerated rate”, adding “the western and eastern parts of the world have a completely different opinion on everything”.

Referring to the war in Ukraine, he said “the West, except for the Hungarians”, had got involved in the war, while the rest of the world remained noncommittal or supported Russia. Orbán said East and West had different view on Taiwan too. “With small differences, this applies to the Middle East.” Geopolitical rivalry overrode the logic of the markets, he said. “In fact, technological developments are also determined by political considerations.”

“The outcome of the debate may be crucial,” he said, adding that “one possibility … is decoupling; that is the West separating itself from the rest of the global economy and protecting its positions because competition with the East threatens the loss of areas under Western control and even its internal markets.”

The alternative, connectivity — that is coupling East and West — could mean that “the West loses ground, but the reason for that is a lack of competitiveness; in this case, it would not attempt to use political means to stop the East from advancing but become more economically competitive,” he said.

“Europe does not even believe in its own ability to embark on internal changes … to raise the competitiveness of Western businesses to Eastern levels,” Orbán said. Should a “cold war return with decoupling”, the border between East and West would lie along Hungary’s eastern border, he insisted, adding: “We will become an uninteresting, obscure and dusty periphery of the Western world.”

With cooperation and trade, he said, Hungary would be between two worlds as a country “in which both will find opportunities”, adding that Hungarian economic policy was based on the assumption that its position between those two worlds could be maintained.

Orbán said Hungary is a part of the West, but it would not detach itself from the world’s Eastern parts, noting that Hungary is a member of the Turkic Council, cooperates with China, and it would not give up its cooperation with Russia unless the European Union’s sanctions rendered this impossible in some areas.

“West won’t win it against the Russians”

Orbán said the first lesson to be learned from the war between Russia and Ukraine was the inevitability of European rearmament.

“We don’t know how long the Americans will stay here in Europe, and we can’t guarantee our security on our own, so defence industry developments are being accelerated everywhere,” the prime minister said.

He said Hungarians’ “instincts” had been right, arguing that the country had embarked on an unprecedented military upgrade 3-4 years before the war broke out.

“So we’re ahead of everyone by 2-3 years,” Orbán said. “Politics can sometimes be a world of intuitions, not just matters of fact. This is true for both the green transition and defence industry developments.”

He said the war in Ukraine was a “proxy war”, and it was “completely obvious that the West won’t win it against the Russians”. He added, at the same time, that this was also true the other way round, and “sooner or later there will be peace talks”.

“The question is who has time on their side,” Orbán said. “We’re the only country that says that time is on the Russians’ side, so our interest lies in this conflict ending as soon as possible.”

Orbán noted, however, that “most countries in western Europe, unfortunately, believe that time is on the West’s side”. “This is an interesting train of thought if one is sitting on the shore of the Atlantic Ocean and not the Carpathian Basin.”

He said the main principle of Hungary’s security strategy was that there must always be an entity between Hungary and Russia, “and right now this is called Ukraine”.

The main question of the war from Hungary’s perspective, Orbán said, was whether Russia’s border would move closer towards Hungary, adding that if the fighting continued, the Russian border would be closer, owing to the Russian military successes.

“This is completely against our interests, but at the same time we are convinced that there’s only one way to avoid this: if the West pulls itself together and tries to achieve peace talks,” he said.

Orbán said this “won’t be as easy now as it would’ve been a year ago”, arguing that Russia now clearly had the military advantage.

Trump’s return

Meanwhile, he said, another threat to Europe was that Russia would only be willing to negotiate with the United States, and Europe’s security situation would become dependent entirely on an agreement between Russia and the US.

“So, the direct security situation isn’t looking good … and the only sane chance on Hungary’s part is to bet on President Trump’s return,” Orbán said.

Only a new player who did not have a role in the outbreak of the war could find a way out of it, the prime minister insisted, adding that the world’s only chance for “a relatively quick peace deal” was for there to be political change in the US.

“So, the question of who Hungary likes or doesn’t like isn’t one of sympathy, but about which president pursues a foreign policy that strengthens Hungarian security,” he said.

“We can’t have a say in what kind of a president America should choose, but we don’t see that the current American administration has the ability to secure a swift peace on this front,” Orbán said, adding that this was also a critical factor for the Hungarian economy.

European parliamentary elections

The prime minister said the European parliamentary elections would be significant in terms of “common sense”.

He said the European political scene was divided between “the globalists and federalists on one side and the sovereigntists on the other”. He said politics in Europe today was driven by ideology, adding that the biggest problem was that those in the key positions “tend to think along the lines of left-wing ideology, and those are the kinds of decisions they make”.

But, he said, “ideological thinking” could not keep an equilibrium between ideas and practice. He said the “triumph of ideological thinking over reality” resulted in the enactment of measures in areas like climate policy or agriculture “that seem right in principle but ruin us in the process”.

Orbán said the solution was therefore to elect a right-wing European leadership that “respects reality more”.

“There will certainly be a rightward shift towards common sense in Europe, but it’s not yet known whether this will be a breakthrough or just a change in the balance of power,” Orbán said, adding that realistically it would be the latter.

Visegrad Group

Turning to Hungary’s regional partnerships, Orbán noted that Hungary, Czechia, Poland and Slovakia had for long “thought in terms of the Visegrad Group structure”, and though this should not be abandoned, “as long as it has life left in it”, there was also an opportunity for another cooperation among “sovereigntist countries”.

This partnership, he said, included Hungary, Slovakia, Serbia, noting that there was an election scheduled for September in Austria, too. This, he said, could “easily lead to” an Austrian-Hungarian-Slovak-Serbian partnership in the coming period, which would not replace, but rather complement the V4.

Foreign investments

Meanwhile, Orbán said foreign businesses were pulling 4-6 billion euros in earnings out of Hungary, but a ban on profit repatriation would hamstring investments.

But this “openness”, he said, was not a problem if the foreign investments of Hungarian businesses generated more profits than what was repatriated by foreign companies.

Foreign investments generate an average of 1.3-1.5 billion euros in profits, and factoring in 1.0-1.5 billion euros in EU transfers, this leaves some 3 billion euros of profits in Hungary as against the 4-6 billion that is repatriated, he said.

In terms of the future, Orbán said it was important to support national holdings capable of generating profit abroad and repatriating it, mentioning oil and gas company MOL, OTP Bank, real estate, infocommunications and the defence industry as examples.

If these investments abroad can be financed and supported, and if there are entrepreneurs with competitive goods and services, they have to invest, otherwise “the balance of profits will never be restored, and we’ll always be left … feeling like we’re being exploited”, he said.

Concerning the 6.5 percent budget deficit, Orbán said there were many factors that had to be combined when it came to planning the deficit, arguing that the government did not want growth to be halted, to cut spending, risk the standard of living, or scrap family support measures or utility price caps.

Citing the finance minister, Orbán noted that the government aimed to cut the budget deficit to 4.5 percent of GDP this year, before reducing it to 3.7 percent next year and to 2.9 percent in 2026.

He said the EU economy was only just returning to a “regulated functioning” after the pandemic, noting that EU finance ministers predict that it will take four years for all member states to stabilise their budget deficits below 3 percent and their public debt levels below 60 percent.

If, for some reason, Hungary failed to cut its deficit and debt in three years, it still had another “buffer year” to do so without risking being penalised by the EU, the prime minister said.

He said it was possible to meet this target, noting that a member state that took on structural reforms had seven years to meet the budget deficit and public debt criteria again. “But we don’t trust those in Brussels enough to base our fiscal strategy on this, so let’s stick to this 3+1 year solution,” he added.

Orbán also said it was important to answer the question of “what happens if our bets don’t win”, meaning that the government’s desired political changes don’t happen in either the US or Brussels, and it takes longer to reduce the deficit.

PM Orbán: Ukraine cannot win, but Russia can defeat Kyiv

PM Orbán Ukraine cannot win, but Russia can defeat Kyiv

There seems to be no solution to the conflict between Russia and Ukraine and that leaves European politics “paralysed”, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said at the Antalya Diplomatic Forum on Friday.

Ukraine cannot win

“If you think that time is on the Ukrainian and the Western side, and continuing the war can provide military success for the Ukrainians, it’s reasonable to continue. If you think that time is more on the Russian side, and continuing the war would bring more success to the Russians, for the Ukrainians it is better to stop now. I belong to the second camp,” Orbán said.

He said “we are in trouble” because many countries consider the conflict as “our war” and “if the enemy proves to be stronger … you belong to the losers … and it’s very difficult to explain how to behave and how to get out of a situation when you lose a war”.

On another subject, Orbán said he was often referred to as “Putin’s dog” or a “Trojan horse”, but added that “It requires psychotherapy. It’s not a political discussion.”

He added that he was not viewing the war “through the eyeglasses of Ukraine or those of Putin” but from a Hungarian perspective.

“I have to represent the interest of my country and my nation … when something is good for the Hungarians, I will support and when something is bad, I will oppose it,” he said.

Hungarians are dying in the war in Ukraine

Orbán noted the ethnic Hungarian community in Transcarpathia, who have lived there for one thousand years and are now getting conscripted to the Ukrainian army.

“Hungarians are dying in the war in Ukraine,” Orbán said, adding that they belong to the Hungarian nation. Peace in Ukraine would ensure security “to Hungarian lives”, he added.

“That’s one reason, beyond some others, why we are very much committed as Hungarians to peace,” Orbán said.

The prime minister was asked if he saw Hungary’s future in the European Union.

God should be in the centre of European politics

“Of course, if you are Hungarian, you are European,” he said.

“Hungary will always have a special geopolitical place in the European Union,” Orbán said, adding that the country was a member of the Turkic Council “because we are the only nation of eastern origin in Europe, or at least the only one which is proud of it”.

He added, however, that it was a question how the community wanted to shape its future. Currently, Europe is based on a progressive, liberal ideology, he said.

“God is out of political considerations,” Orbán said, adding that the notions of the nation and national pride were considered with suspicion.

“Family values are not respected either, because the family does not exist anymore in Europe,” he said. The prime minister said the difference of opinion between liberals and conservatives was growing, but added that the current majority should accept that there were conflicting positions. Hungary wants to stay a member of the EU, but wants to achieve that the conservatives should gain a majority, Orbán said.

Right wing will be stronger in the EP

The prime minister said the upcoming EP elections would change the composition of the European Parliament, in which the right wing would have greater weight.

“It’s not a revolution, an overnight revolution or something like that, but a change would start by the election in June. That’s my hope, at least,” he said.

Concerning Sweden’s joining NATO, Orbán said those endeavours had been clear from a geopolitical point of view from the beginning, and expressed Hungary’s support. He added, however, that Sweden could not belong to the same community without respecting Hungary.

Orbán said Sweden had actively supported European charges against Hungary suggesting Hungary’s violating the rule of law, and in connection with Hungary’s rejecting same-sex marriages and uncontrolled migration.

“I said if you would like to join NATO, we have to rebuild the trust and confidence between each other … So please come and do it. And then they came and we did,” Orbán said.

Orbán to meet Trump next week

The prime minister confirmed that he would meet in Florida next week former US President Donald Trump whom Orbán said he “respects very much”.

Orbán said he was convinced that if Trump had been in office when the war in Ukraine broke out “there would have been no war now”, adding that there would only be a serious chance for peace if Trump “is able to come back”.

Asked if he would meet President Joe Biden, Orbán said “I’m always at his disposal”, adding however that it was up to the American people to decide on the next US president. Trump’s return, Orbán said, would be more desirable for Hungary and for peace.

Asked about Hungary’s upcoming EP presidency in the second half of this year, the prime minister said its priorities included the EU’s enlargement with the Balkan region and Europe’s competitiveness.

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PM Orbán travels to Florida to meet Trump, Chinese President Xi may visit Budapest – UPDATED

Donald Trump Viktor Orbán

According to the government-close Hír TV, Hungarian PM Viktor Orbán will meet President Trump in Florida where he’s travelling next week. Meanwhile, another government-close media outlet wrote that preparations are underway for the Chinese President’s visit to Budapest.

Orbán-Trump summit on the cards

The New York Times wrote about a possible Trump-Orbán meeting next week. Based on the plans, the two politicians will meet in the former US president’s Mar-a-Lago club. Trump’s team has not responded yet to the NYT’s information. According to Maggie Haberman, the NYT’s former White House reporter, Orbán asked for the ‘summit’, Hír TV wrote.

UPDATE: Orbán to speak at Heritage Foundation event, meet with Trump in US

Prime Minister Viktor Orban will participate at a panel discussion with Kevin Roberts, the head of the conservative Heritage Foundation, in Washington D.C. on Thursday, March 7, the PM’s press chief said on Sunday. The discussion will focus on the future of ties between the US and Hungary, Bertalan Havasi said. On Friday, Orban will meet for talks with former US President Donald Trump in Florida.

Chinese president will visit Hungary?

Meanwhile, index.hu wrote that the Chinese Minister of public security, Wang Xiaohong visited Budapest in February only to prepare the scene for Xi Jinping’s Budapest stay. Serbia’s President, Aleksandar Vučić, confirmed Xi’s visit to Belgrade last week. Index.hu suggested that Budapest might follow the Serbian capital in Xi’s calendar.

Levente Horváth, the director of the Eurasia Centre, said that the 75th anniversary of establishing diplomatic relationships between China and Hungary will be celebrated this autumn. That would give the perfect opportunity for Xi’s visit. Furthermore, Hungary will preside the Council of the European Union in the second half of this year.

Xi’s last visit to Hungary was in 2009, when he served as deputy president of China. In 2016, he visited Poland, the Czech Republic and Serbia but did not come to Budapest.

Orbán travelled to Türkiye today

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán met Bulgarian President Rumen Radev in Antalya, Turkiye, on Friday, with Hungary-Bulgaria economic relations and energy security high on the agenda, the PM’s press chief said in a statement.

The leaders expressed concern about the potential escalation of the war in Ukraine and called for a ceasefire and peace negotiations, the statement said, adding that both firmly rejected recent talk of sending troops to Ukraine.

Péter Szijjártó, the foreign minister, and Márton Nagy, the national economy minister, attended the meeting.

Deputy Speaker of Parliament: Visegrád Group ‘alive in parliament cooperation’

Deputy Speaker of Parliament Csaba Hende attended a meeting of the parliamentary heads of the Visegrád countries and Ukraine in Prague on Thursday, and said the event had shown that “the Visegrad cooperation is alive in its parliamentary form”.

The meeting of the heads of government of Czechia, Hnugary, Poland and Slovakia earlier in the week highlighted the common ground on issues such as the fight against illegal migration, a joint stance against EU tax harmonisation to preserve the region’s competitiveness, and the protection of nations’ sovereign right to determine their energy mix, Hende said. They are also working together to create regional energy independence and to protect the European markets from poor quality agricultural produce, he said.

After the meeting, Hende had bilateral talks with Ruslan Stefanchuk, the speaker of the Ukrainian parliament.

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The fascinating story of saving Hungary’s gold in the 1940s

Hungary gold Hungarian National Bank (Copy)

The Gold Train began one of the most adventurous journeys in Hungarian history on 23 January 1945. The Hungarian National Bank’s 30 tonnes of gold reserves, large foreign currency reserves and deposited valuables and documents (such as King Matthias’ Corvinas) were attempted to be evacuated to the West by the Szálasi government (Government of National Unity, a Nazi-backed puppet government of Hungary) to escape the advancing Soviet Red Army.

Ferencné Tóth Mária Stark, who was among the passengers of the legendary Gold Train as a small child, shared her personal story with Növekedés.hu.

Historical background

gold train
Gold Train, on the day of opening the Money Museum, Budapest, Hungary. Statue by Gábor Miklós Szőke. Source: Elekes Andor/Wikimedia Commons

On 19 March 1944, German troops invaded Hungary. On 15 October, the Arrow Cross Party took power in the country and established the coalition Government of National Unity on 16 October.

László Temesváry was appointed head of the Hungarian National Bank (MNB), and the Soviet advance soon led to negotiations on the export of Hungarian gold reserves to the West, Növekedés.hu recalls.

The German leadership aimed to have the assets housed in several parts of the German Reich. If implemented, this would most likely have led to Hungary’s national treasures falling into German hands for good. However, the bank’s employees resisted political pressure.

In December, the Gold Train set off from the bunker in Veszprém with the heroic employees of the MNB to deposit the “nation’s gold” in Spital am Pyhrn in Austria after a cold and fearful Christmas in Fertőboz.

The train rolled out of Fertőboz station on 23 January and arrived in Spital am Pyhrn on 25 January, where the treasures were stored in the crypt of the local Benedictine monastery.

On 7 May 1945, Spital am Phyrn was occupied by American troops. US soldiers took the Hungarian gold reserve to Frankfurt am Main, where it was stored in the basement of the German central bank.

In June 1946, negotiations took place in Washington to return the valuables held in Spital am Phyrn and Frankfurt am Main to Hungary.

The Hungarian delegation was led by Prime Minister Ferenc Nagy. The US finally agreed to repatriate the Hungarian gold reserve and other valuables. This gold reserve was the collateral for the newly introduced forint.

The illustrated story of saving Hungary’s gold (unfortunately, only in Hungarian):

Narrative history – the memories of a passenger of the Gold Train

The father of Ferencné Tóth Mária Stark was an employee of the Hungarian National Bank, first as a cashier in Budapest, then in Szeged, and finally in Târgu Mures. Mária was born in Târgu Mures.

She was three months old when they had to leave Târgu Mures.

To escape the approaching Russians, her father and his colleagues used a truck to rescue the bank ledgers. Her mother and Mária were first taken to Dej, and finally, the family met in Csesznek.

“In Veszprém, the valuables were hidden in a bunker under the castle and we knew we were going to Austria by train. We also knew what the cargo would be,” Mária told Növekedés.hu.

The Germans were in front of them, the Russians behind them. When the train left Fertőboz, Russians had not yet arrived, but the bombing was already in full swing. Everybody knew what danger they were in.

A cold and fearful Christmas in Fertőboz

The passengers spent Christmas in Fertőboz. The children were accommodated in first-class coaches. The people of Fertőboz provided them with food. At Christmas time, they were the ones who put up a Christmas tree for the children in the wagon. While they were waiting, there were several bombings, so they hid in the wagons. They had nowhere else to go.

Mária is still afraid of thunder to this day.

According to Mária, they were made very welcome by the locals in Spital am Phyrn.

When we arrived by train, there was a good metre of snow. The bank workers, including my dad, were using sledges to haul the 33 tonnes of gold and other valuables down to the basement of the monastery,

Mária shared.

On the way home

Mária and her family came home with the last consignment in October 1946. They already had their train tickets and boat tickets to Argentina; however, the trip was cancelled because her father said,

I’m Hungarian, I want to go home.

After they came home, her father was fired from the Hungarian National Bank in 1948.

“This is a very sad memory for me,” Mária said. They had to move out of the flat they had been living in, and they exchanged it for a small flat. Her mother worked as a caretaker and her father as a conductor.

Mária has personally experienced discrimination in Hungary. In 1957, they moved to Sopron. After high school, she wanted to go to university. However, the headmistress in Sopron told Mária to “not even try” because she was a “Westerner”.

To this day, it still hurts me that I didn’t get to go to university because I went abroad as a baby. But my father instilled in me that I am Hungarian, so I belong here.

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Zsa Zsa Gabor’s widower: I will pay a huge sum to anyone who bears me an heir

Zsa Zsa Gabor’s 80-year-old widower, Prince Frédéric von Anhalt, wants to leave this world knowing that someone will inherit the huge fortune he has. For this, he would be prepared to pay a substantial sum: USD 1 million.

Prince Frédéric von Anhalt wants a child of his own

The Hungarian-born Hollywood star, Zsa Zsa Gabor’s former husband has a fortune of around USD 60 million. This sum is held in a trust fund, to which only Von Anhalt has access currently, Blikk, a Hungarian tabloid, reports. The prince had been searching in vain for an heir so far. Thus, his newest plan is a child of his own, now that the right person has not been found.

“[I need] anyone who is found worthy to be my heir. However, this is conditional on their desire to continue and keep alive the life’s work of Zsa Zsa Gábor, and that is why I am trying to adopt someone worthy,” the prince has said several times. However, his plan seems to have failed for the time being.

Unable to find a suitable heir, Frédéric von Anhalt decided to find a surrogate mother to bear him a child. He came up with a fabulous offer to anyone who accepts: USD 1 million.

“I’m running out of time”

 

“Girls, all I want is a child of my own. I need an heir because I’m running out of time,” Frédéric von Anhalt wrote on his Instagram page. The man confirmed to Blikk that he would be the perfect sugar daddy for anyone who helped him solve this problem. Sugar daddies are older and wealthy men who provide financial support to a younger girl in exchange for her companionship or intimate contact.

The prince does not want an intimate relationship, only a woman who will bear him a child. The lady chosen would be a real winner, as the offer could make her a million dollars richer. What is more, on special occasions, she could even wear pieces from Zsa Zsa Gabor’s jewellery collection worth millions of dollars – at least that’s what the widower of the diva promises.

I don’t want my money to go to the state,

Prince Anhalt declared.

His previous heir disappointed von Anhalt

The prince adopted a German footballer, Kevin Feucht, a few years ago, but he did not live up to his hopes.

“I was very disappointed in him, so Kevin is a thing of the past, he’s not my heir anymore. He is not worthy to carry on Zsa Zsa’s life’s work and mine. My previous adopted sons were only interested in the title, not in the work,” said Frédéric von Anhalt. In recent years, he has adopted a fitness studio owner, a nightclub boss, a fashion designer, a lawyer and a brothel owner, and still has no heir.

A fun fact about Zsa Zsa Gabor

Gábor Zsazsa, Hungary, actress
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Did you know that the gravestone of the Hungarian-born diva in the Fiumei Road Graveyard in Budapest does not have years on it?

“There is no year on it because Zsa Zsa always hated it when people knew how old she was. She once threw her passport in the trash and had a new one made at the consulate just to be eight years younger on her papers,” Blikk quoted the prince as saying.

Almost a year after Zsa Zsa Gabor’s funeral in Hungary, in 2022, the Hollywood diva’s tombstone was been completed in the Fiumei Road Graveyard. The headstone, however, bears only the actress’ name and a strange word: Da-h-lin’ k’, which is how Zsa Zsa pronounced the word darling.

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