NATO

Swedish PM to visit Budapest on Friday

Viktor Orbán

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson is scheduled to visit Budapest on Feb 23, at the invitation of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, the Hungarian PM’s press chief said on Tuesday.

The prime ministers will discuss defence and security cooperation and preparations for Hungary’s EU presidency in the second half of the year, Bertalan Havasi said.

Kristersson and Orbán will hold a joint press conference after the talks, he added.

Read also:

Hungarian govt asks parlt to debate Sweden’s NATO accession next Monday

Sweden NATO Ulf Kristersson Georgia
The group leader of ruling Fidesz has asked parliament to put the ratification of Sweden’s NATO accession onto its agenda for next Monday, the first day of the national assembly’s spring season.
Máté Kocsis shared the group’s letter to Speaker of Parliament László Kövér on Facebook on Tuesday, and said his party would “support the vote on the ratification bill”.
Read also:

PM Kristersson looks forward to discussing Sweden’s NATO membership with Orbán in Budapest

Ulf Kristersson orbán

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson expressed on Monday his confidence in Hungary’s commitment to finalising Sweden’s accession to NATO, stating that there is “a strong will” from Hungary’s side.

We have reached another episode in Sweden‘s to NATO membership. Following Turkey’s endorsement of Sweden’s entry into the military alliance, Hungary found itself in an uncomfortable position. The expansion of the world’s most powerful military coalition was blocked by a nation with a modest army, citing previous disparaging insults from Stockholm. Demands were absent, leaving uncertainty regarding Hungary’s desires. However, it appears that Orbán has successfully navigated this peculiar deadlock by brokering a significant military equipment agreement with Sweden. Now, even to his constituents, the former veto may seem justified. One thing is certain: Hungarians harbours no ill will towards the Swedes, nor have they ever.

It appears that the Swedish side have acquiesced to the Hungarian proposal, and the visit of the Swedish Prime Minister to Budapest is now confirmed.

“When it concerns Hungary, I eagerly anticipate my visit to Budapest, and we will certainly inform you once the date is set,”

Kristersson said, responding to a question during a joint press conference with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk in Warsaw.

Kristersson further revealed that he and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán have engaged in “several discussions over the past weeks”, expressing his anticipation for their forthcoming meeting.

We previously outlined the potential scope of a grand bargain deal here: How can Sweden join NATO? Orbán seals a massive arms and military industry deal.

Meanwhile, as we reported yesterday, US senators claim that Orbán cabinet endangers Transatlantic security.

How can Sweden join NATO? Orbán seals a massive arms and military industry deal

gripen hungary

In his annual assessment speech on Saturday, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán announced that discussions with Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson regarding Sweden’s NATO accession were nearing resolution. With Hungary playing a pivotal role in these deliberations, the terms and potential outcomes have been unveiled, raising the possibility that Hungary may opt not to veto Sweden’s NATO accession.

According to Index, the most significant defence announcement in years is expected soon, coinciding with the conclusion of the debate surrounding Sweden’s potential NATO membership. Relations between the two prime ministers are thriving, marked by an upcoming visit from the Swedish prime minister to Hungary. Unofficial sources suggest that the Swedish embassy in Hungary is already making preparations for his arrival. Additionally, a recent breakthrough in military and defence cooperation between the two governments holds promise for the acquisition of new equipment for the Hungarian Defence Forces.

Strategic visions

Two years ago, in December 2022, Kristóf Szalay-Bobrovniczky publicly disclosed that four new Gripen aircraft were set to arrive by 2024, thereby increasing the total number of Gripen aircraft in Hungary to 18. Furthermore, in an English-language podcast titled “The Bold Truth About Hungary,” the Minister of Defence, alongside the State Secretary for International Communications and Relations, disclosed that the Hungarian Defence Forces had embarked on a new phase of military development, drawing extensively from insights gleaned from the Ukrainian conflict. The defence minister emphasised that the primary objective in developing the Defence Forces is to ensure Hungary’s demonstrable strength, encompassing both physical capabilities and resolve. Their aim is to attain the authorised size of the army, set at 37,500 personnel, with plans to double this number in the foreseeable future. It has been 18 years since the arrival of Gripen jets in Hungary, hailed as the most modern and formidable combat aircraft in the region. The acquisition of the JAS-39 C/D Gripen marked a significant leap in force development for the Hungarian Defence Forces following the regime change, symbolising Hungary’s departure from reliance on Eastern technology.

Possible advancements in Hungarian Defence

The prospective aircraft which may end up in Hungary are manufactured by SAAB, renowned for their production of Gripen fighter-bombers. SAAB is currently manufacturing the latest E and F versions, already commissioned by Sweden. These new aircraft boast increased payload capacity and range compared to their predecessors, enabling the carriage of heavier and longer-range weaponry. Additionally, upgrades have been made to the radar and electronic combat systems. As part of the agreement, the Hungarian Defence Forces may gain access to a variety of other weapon systems, including a portable, shoulder-launched weapon, often referred to as a hand-held artillery which is capable of engaging armoured and other land targets. With an investment of approximately 55 million dollars, Hungarian Defence Forces have secured procurement of this equipment scheduled for delivery between 2019 and 2024. Moreover, the Defence Forces are actively enhancing their electronic reconnaissance and combat capabilities. Collaboration with the Swedish defence industry holds the promise of producing a range of cutting-edge equipment, representing a significant advancement for the Hungarian Defence Forces.

UPDATE

PM Kristersson looks forward to discussing Sweden’s NATO membership with Orbán in Budapest

Read also:

  • US senators: Orbán cabinet endangers Transatlantic security! – HERE
  • State of the Nation: PM Orbán talks about bad year-start, NATO, Trump victory, President’s resignation – HERE

US senators: Orbán cabinet endangers Transatlantic security! – UPDATED

US Senators Shaheen, Tillis, and Murphy in Hungary about Transatlantic security (Copy)

A bipartisan delegation of the US Senate is now in Hungary investigating several issues, including Hungary’s NATO policy, the Swedish NATO accession and other controversial topics. They say the Hungarian government endangered Transatlantic security at a key moment considering European peace and stability. They are to submit that resolution to the Congress. What consequences will follow?

We wrote HERE that a bipartisan delegation came to Hungary, because of which Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó became outraged. He highlighted Hungary is a sovereign country and added that there were lies spread in America about Hungary.

“If they’re coming to tell us how we ought to live or what decisions we ought to make, I wouldn’t recommend that because that would be — as they say — an incomplete mission, so it wouldn’t be worth it,” he added.

According to 444.hu, a Democrat and Republican senator are ready to submit a resolution to the Congress condemning the Hungarian government’s Russia-friendly policies. Furthermore, they would like to pressure Orbán to ratify Sweden’s NATO accession.

AP acquired the draft of the resolution which criticizes the Hungarian government for dismantling democratic institutions, influencing media, and restricting civic rights.

Orbán’s close relationship with Russia and China

Jeanne Shaheen (Democrat) from New Hampshire and Thom Tillis (Republican) from North Carolina slam Orbán’s decision to use the pandemic, the war in Ukraine and the migration to govern with decrees (Orbán has a supermajority in the parliament). There were two more senators in the delegation, Chris Murphy and Chris Van Hollen, but only the Mrs Shaheen and Mr Tillis are members of the Senate NATO Observer Group.

They will remind them of Orbán’s promise not to be the last member state to accept the Swedish NATO accession. The resolution says that delaying Sweden’s bid endangered Transatlantic security in a key moment of European peace and stability.

Moreover, they slam Orbán’s close relationship with Russia and China and the Orbán cabinet’s measures hindering the EU’s anti-Russia sanctions.

Meanwhile, the Swedish foreign minister expects Hungary to accept Stockholm’s NATO bid.

Orbán said in his State of the Nation speech yesterday that the Hungarian parliament would accept that in February.

US senators disappointed

According to 24.hu, the senators were disappointed because nobody from the government or Fidesz agreed to meet and discuss the aforementioned topics with them. Meanwhile, as Shaheen highlighted, the USA is the second biggest investor in Hungary.

Read also:

  • Biden cabinet disappointed: PM Orbán leads Hungary out from NATO by boycotting Sweden? – Read more HERE
  • Hungarian wine on top 10 New York Times list – Details in THIS article

US Ambassador to Budapest David Pressman welcomed the senators at Budapest Airport:

UPDATE 2

US senators trust Hungarian lawmakers will ratify Sweden’s NATO accession soon

United States Senator Jeanne Shaheen said a bipartisan delegation of her peers trusted that Hungarian lawmakers would soon ratify Sweden’s NATO accession bid, speaking at a press conference in Budapest on Sunday, but expressed disappointment that nobody from the Hungarian government had met with them.
The delegation, on a mission focused on strategic issues confronting NATO and Hungary, included Senator Shaheen, a Democrat, and Senator Thom Tillis, a Republican, who both co-chair the Senate NATO Observer Group, as well as Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat and member of the Committee on Foreign Relations.

Shaheen noted at the press conference that Hungary was the last NATO member whose parliament had still not ratified Sweden’s accession to the alliance, adding that Prime Minister Viktor Orban had earlier said it wouldn’t be the last one to do so.

Shaheen said she trusted Orban would honour a pledge made in his state of the nation address on Saturday that Hungarian lawmakers would ratify Sweden’s NATO accession at the start of parliament’s spring session.

The senators stressed that Sweden’s accession to NATO would strengthen the alliance and the security of the United States and Hungary in the current situation.

Shaheen stressed the importance of NATO being the strongest and most unified alliance possible considering the challenges facing Europe in the context of the war in Ukraine.

Senator Tillis said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was a threat against democracy, against Hungary and against Europe, which was why NATO needed to be enlarged.

Senator Murphy said there was no reason for the Hungarian parliament to further delay the ratification of Sweden’s NATO accession.

Fielding questions, Tillis said the US respected Hungary’s independence and sovereignty, but added that the country needed to support Sweden’s NATO accession, just like the other members of the NATO family.

Asked to comment on remarks by Peter Szijjarto, the foreign minister, suggesting Russia was not a threat to NATO members, Shaheen said she didn’t agree at all.

The senators had wanted to review with representatives of the Hungarian government bilateral economic ties, the situation of human rights and matters related to the upcoming presidential election in the US.

Shaheen noted that the US was the second-biggest foreign investor in Hungary.

She said a declaration assessing the situation of Sweden’s NATO accession would be submitted with her co-chair of the Senate NATO Observer Group upon their return to the US.

Featured image: Ambassador Pressman with the senators

Hungary will approve Sweden’s NATO accession very soon – UPDATED

NATO Sweden Orbán Stoltenberg

At least that is what PM Viktor Orbán suggested in his yesterday State of the Nation speech in Budapest. It seems that Orbán – following the presidential pardon scandal – will not prolong the dispute with Sweden over its NATO bid and will not wait until the Swedish prime minister visits Budapest.

There is an interesting double-faced communication concerning the Swedish NATO accession. The Hungarian government says they support Stockholm’s bid, but the Fidesz parliamentary group resists. In some democracies, such a situation could be imaginable. In Hungary, that is unrealistic.

As insiders keep saying, Fidesz functions as an army. And nobody says ‘No’ in an army to a command from above.

Therefore, we can say that Orbán decides whether his parliamentary group gives the green light for Sweden. And he denied that from Stockholm for almost two years.

There is no good answer as to why he’s done that. The Hungarian government never expressed any prerequisites towards the Swedish government. They only said that some Swedish politicians do not ‘respect’ the Orbán cabinet and spread lies about it. Experts said Orbán blocks Sweden’s NATO bid because that is how he makes sure Erdogan does not remain alone.

Hungary will accept Sweden’s NATO bid

Previously, the Hungarian government said that Budapest would not be the last one to approve the Swedish NATO bid. But that is exactly what happened in January when Türkiye accepted it in just a few days. The Hungarian opposition called together an extraordinary session to follow the Turkish example, but Fidesz and KDNP lawmakers remained away.

The presidential pardon scandal could have allowed Orbán to settle the issue, and call together another extraordinary session to accept the President’s resignation and accept the Swedish NATO bid. But they missed that option for some reason.

Yesterday, the prime minister talked about Stockholm’s NATO bid in his State of the Nation Speech. Orbán said it was “good news that our dispute with Sweden is nearing a conclusion”. Together with the Swedish prime minister, they made important steps to rebuild trust, he said, adding that the Hungarian parliament could ratify Sweden’s NATO accession at the start of its spring session.

That means Hungary will accept Sweden’s NATO bid in end-February. However, it does not explain why Budapest blocked it for almost two years. It suggests that Orbán accepted the Swedish prime minister’s refusal to come to Hungary before the voting to discuss the issues as he did in the case of Ankara.

Evaluating the issue from the outside, it seems blocking the Swedish NATO bid became a diplomatic failure for Orbán.

UPDATE

According to index.hu, the Swedish and the Hungarian governments will conclude a large arms and military industry deal following the Hungarian parliament’s green light for Sweden’s NATO accession. The media outlet could not acquire verified information about the agreement, but they wrote military equipment would arrive in Hungary. It may happen that they will modify Hungary’s Gripen deal. Furthermore, the Swedish embassy in Budapest is preparing for the visit of the Swedish prime minister.

Read also:

  • Hungary will accept Sweden’s NATO bid next week? – Read more HERE
  • If Sweden wants to join the NATO, their prime minister will have to travel to Budapest – Details in THIS article

Featured image: Illustration

State of the Nation: PM Orbán talks about bad year-start, NATO, Trump victory, President’s resignation

Viktor Orbán state of the nation speech

“There must be no pardon for paedophile crimes,” Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said in his state of the nation speech on Saturday, adding that President Katalin Novák’s and former Justice Minister Judit Varga’s resignations had been the “correct step” and would “strengthen us”.

Children must not be violated

The prime minister said the government would reinforce Hungary’s child protection system. He also addressed the green transition and said parliament could ratify Sweden’s NATO accession at the start of its spring season.

“Children must not be violated and any abuse should entail the strictest punishment,” Orbán said.

He said the resignations were “a bad start” for the year, adding that it was up to the government “to restore moral order and offer legal remedy for the current situation.”

“A political mistake is annoying, even if there is an explanation, but even more so when there is none,” he added.

According to the prime minister, an uproar in the wake of the president’s pardon in right-wing circles arose because it was not a decision made in a difficult situation but an “unforced error”. “For right wingers the rule is simple: there must be no pardon for paedophile crimes,” he added.

He said that the resignation should be “sufficient compensation and an example for the country, a chance for Hungary to come out stronger from a difficult situation . and we will do so,”.

President’s resignation great loss for Hungary

He said the president’s resignation was “a great loss for Hungary” and thanked both Novák and Varga for their work. He added that the two had “more dignity in their little finger than in all of the leaders of the leftist parties put together.”

He praised Novák as a “greatly respected, appreciated president working, moreover, fighting for her homeland, the Hungarian people and their families . seen by all as a person fit for her presidential position.” He referred to Novák as an “embodiment of the good characteristics of Hungarians, a kind and prepared mother, who sought not to prove her abilities against men and according to men’s measures.” Novák “demonstrated in her natural way that women’s way of thinking and feeling are indispensable in all walks of life including politics,” he added.

Novák resigned because she had pardoned a man sentenced for covering up a crime against children, and “the vast majority of Hungarians rejected that pardon”, Orbán said. “The president’s pardon impacted national unity and she could no longer restore that unity,” he added.

“A toppled equilibrium can be restored, the high waves of indignation tamed, the nation reunited over issues around family and child protection only through the president’s resignation and electing a new president,” Orbán said.

Concerning the former justice minister, Orbán said Varga had countersigned the president’s pardon “following the constitutional custom and an unbroken practice of the past 25 years.” “Her departure is an unavoidable and, I think, unfair, consequence of the laws of the state,” he said.

Political mistake with no explanation

“Sometimes good people, even the best, will make bad decisions, and . if they could fly back in time they would certainly correct the mistake. But it is not possible and now it is up to the government . to restore moral order and offer legal remedy for the situation,” Orbán said.

“Serving the nation also requires personal humility . you need to know that no matter how high you are you can never be clever enough by yourself and there are no protected positions, even in the highest office one can make a mistake,” he said.

“A political mistake is annoying, even if there is an explanation, but even more so when there is none,” he added.

Hungary’s child protection system must be strengthened, from the constitution to the level of ministerial decree, Orbán said.

“The tribulations of the victims compel us”, Orbán said, adding that the leadership and oversight of children’s protection institutions as well as regulations and restrictions for the staff who work there would be strengthened.

He said a new package of child protection legislation would be submitted to parliament.

Orbán said electing a new president was an “urgent task” and asked the parliamentary group of governing Fidesz-KDNP to start the process of electing a replacement for Katalin Novák on the day she left office.

Read also:

  • Will Russian embassy’s street in Budapest be named after Alexei Navalny? – Read more HERE
  • Reformed Bishop resigns after admitting he supported scandalous presidential pardon

UPDATE

Hungary has emerged from a very difficult 2023 “by the skin of our teeth” but “can’t be dissatisfied” with the results, Orbán said

He said Hungarians had been living and working under “extreme pressure” for the fifth year in a row, trying to “protect that which we’ve achieved”. Workplaces have been successfully preserved, he said, noting that never before had so many people been in jobs in Hungary.

Labour reserve in Hungary above 300,000

Hungary’s employment rates stands at 75 percent today, but the government “wants and will” raise that to 85 percent, he said.

He put the number of Hungarians who could be brought into the workforce at “at least 300,000” and added that more Hungarians were returning home each year than were leaving to work abroad.

He said the annual pensioners’ bonus, equivalent to a full month’s pension, which the “left wing had snatched from people”, had also been preserved.

He said Hungarians living beyond the borders had been “brought closer”, noting the construction of three new bridges over the River Ipoly, on the border between Hungary and Slovakia, ten daily trains between Szeged, in the southeast of the country, and Subotica (Szabadka) in neighbouring Serbia, and three flights a week connecting Budapest with Cluj-Napoca (Kolozsvar) in Romania.

Inflation has been reduced from a record 25 percent to below 4 percent, the budget deficit has been kept on a downward path, and the minimum wage for unskilled labourers has been raised by 15 percent, he added.

Addressing the green transition, Orbán said the era of green energy had “not come knocking, but kicked the door in”. The future belongs to green energy and to those who can make the transition “quickly and sensibly”, he added.

He said the stability of Hungarian politics, the two-thirds majority in parliament of the governing alliance, was accommodating to “rapid adaptation”, adding that Hungary could make the green transition faster than anywhere in Europe.

New Paks blocks frees Hungary from energy dependency

Orbán said Hungary could “kill two birds with one stone” with the green transition: making the country more livable and freeing it from energy dependency by adding blocks at the Paks nuclear power plant, extending the lifespan of the existing blocks there and building up industrial and home solar power capacity. Hungary’s solar power capacity now stands over 5,600 MW, he said, adding that 255,000 homes were outfitted with solar panels and solar energy now accounted for 15 percent of energy consumption.

He said that capacity was needed to store green energy as well as to generate it, adding that it was a “matter of a few years” before battery storage devices would be ubiquitous, in cars, homes, workplaces and factories. He said Hungary’s government was spending “several hundred billion forints” toward that end.

Hungary has built interconnectors with the power grids and gas networks of neighbouring countries and it’s a “few years away” from becoming energy independent, he said.

Orbán said Hungary was at the forefront of a technological revolution that would allow it to “rescue” its vehicle manufacturers.
Hungary must avoid the fate of car plants in the West that are being shut down and moved elsewhere, Orbán said. “Imagine Gyor without Audi or Kecskemet without Mercedes!” he added.

Hungary has become a “centre of gravity”

Hungary’s automotive industry output exceeds 13,000 billion forints (EUR 33.4bn) and provides the livelihood for several hundred thousand families, he noted.

He said Hungary was “world class” in terms of pharmaceuticals, seed production, the food industry and ICT, in addition to vehicle manufacturing.

Hungary has become a “centre of gravity” in the Carpathian Basin in terms of politics, culture, and the economy, the prime minister said.

2024 will again be “a year of success”, Orbán said, adding that last year had been “a year of failure” for the European Union, while dragging Hungary down, too.

“Brussels has only brought trouble for us . Brussels’ Ukraine strategy has failed spectacularly, not only on the battlefield but in international politics, too,” Orbán said. Despite the conflict being “a war between two Slavic brothers” the EU “nearly threw itself” into the conflict, leaving Hungary alone with its “pro-peace position”. Hungary’s position will prove to be the right one, “but the tragedy is that hundreds of thousands of people will die till then,” he said.

The Hungarian position is unchanged: “we will not let ourselves be dragged into the war,” Orbán said, adding that the country would not deliver weapons to Ukraine even if that didn’t win the favour of some big powers.

Pressure on Hungary enormous

Orbán said the EU’s “pressure on Hungary” was now so great that ambassadors would come to parliament to “check up on the behaviour of the dollar left” but added that “sooner or later everybody will realise they are better off if they leave us alone.”

The prime minister said it was “good news that our dispute with Sweden is nearing a conclusion”. Together with the Swedish prime minister they made important steps to rebuild trust, he said, adding that the Hungarian parliament could ratify Sweden’s NATO accession at the start of its spring session.

Orbán said the US was increasingly reluctant to provide financing to Ukraine, putting an increasing burden on Europe, which was struggling with an “ailing” economy. Joint EU credit is “a road Hungary won’t go down again”, he added..

“Brussels has abandoned Europeans . never has there been such a huge gap between Brussels’ policies and the interests and will of the European people,” he said. He pointed to the need for change in Brussels but said that change would “not happen by itself . Europe must recapture Brussels”.

Concerning the EU’s new agricultural regime and the opening of European markets to Ukraine, Orbán said they had created “an impossible situation” for European farmers. “Rather than healthy food produced domestically we are forced to accept cultivated meat and GMO junk,” Orbán said.

Farmers protesting all over Europe don’t want regulations to be decided by “climate fanatics” and “ivory tower experts”, he added.

Migration: only bad news come

On the subject of migration, Orbán said he had “bad news only”. He said migration posed a security risk and was a “hotbed for anti-Semitism”, while it would also “uproot European societies”.

“They lured the migrants, sitting in Brussels and in Berlin with cotton candy in the hot sun, and now are surprised to be surrounded by wasps,” he said.

“It is time to face reality: Europe’s competitiveness has been compromised by the war, the sanctions and emerging blocs with the upcoming, fatal consequences of an impoverished middle class, which will also mean the end of democracy,” Orbán said.

Touching on EU enlargement, Orbán said the process had become “a communications tool” serving Ukraine policy goals while Brussels had “abandoned the Balkans, because Ukraine needs the money”.

2024 turning point in the EU?

Orbán said 2024 could be “a turning point” with elections in the European Union, in the United States, in India and a dozen other places.
“The global political stage will look completely different at the end of the year…and if God helps us, Hungary’s room from manoeuvre will increase to an extent not seen for a long time,” he said.

Orbán said he would like to see Donald Trump return to the White House and make peace on the eastern side of Europe. “We cannot have a say in the elections of other countries, but we would very much like Donald Trump to return,” he added.

“Let there be a ‘Make America Great Again’ presidency in America,” he said.

“A revival of greatness in America and Europe. Connectivity, strengthening regional cooperation between Hungary and Slovakia, Austria and Serbia, and a sovereigntist turn in Brussels. That’s what we want under the Christmas tree this year,” he added.

He said that the “bureaucrats in Brussels” wouldn’t bring Europe out of the crisis and that a new European right wing, of which Hungarians were a part, could bring “real change”. The new right wing is “not an alternative to Europe, but a European alternative”, he added.

Will Hungary be kicked out of the NATO? US bipartisan delegation comes, FM Szijjártó saber-rattling

PM Viktor Orbán Joe Biden NATO - diplomacy

On Sunday, February 18, a bipartisan delegation of United States Senators will travel to Hungary on a mission focused on strategic issues confronting NATO and Hungary. According to the Embassy of the USA, the delegation will include:

  • Senator Jeanne Shaheen, co-chair of the Senate NATO Observer Group, member of the Committee on Foreign Relations and Committee on Appropriations;
  • Senator Thom Tillis, co-chair of the Senate NATO Observer Group;
  • Senator Chris Murphy, member of the Committee on Foreign Relations and Committee on Appropriations; and
  • Senator Chris Van Hollen, member of the Committee on Foreign Relations and Committee on Appropriations.

Not worth it for visiting US senators to try to pressure Hungary, says foreign minister

Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto has said a US congressional delegation scheduled to visit Hungary this weekend should not try to put pressure on the country, underlining that Hungary “is a sovereign country”.
Answering a question at a press conference on Friday in connection with a planned visit by a bipartisan delegation of US senators to Hungary, Szijjarto said the government welcomed the senators just as it did every foreign visitor.

“We’re glad that they’re coming, because they’ll be able to see with their own eyes that everything they read about Hungary in the liberal American media is a blatant lie,” Szijjarto said. “And so, they’ll be able to see with their own eyes that we here in Hungary are in no way an obstacle to Hungarian-American cooperation and its improvement.”

An incomplete American mission?

“They’ll see how excellent economic cooperation is between the two countries and they’ll get to see the beauties of the country, so we welcome the US congressmen the same way we welcome any other foreign visitor,” the minister said.

“If they’re coming with the purpose of telling us how we ought to live or what decisions we ought to make, I wouldn’t recommend that because that would definitely be — as they say — an incomplete mission, so it wouldn’t be worth it,” he added.

Szijjarto said he was not aware of the senators having any plans to meet anyone from Hungary’s government sector, noting that their counterparts were the Hungarian members of parliament. “I don’t know if there will be any meetings there,” he said.

We await the Swedish prime minister’s visit

He said the reason why it was not worth trying to put pressure on Hungary was because it “is a sovereign country, and we think a sovereign country shouldn’t put pressure on others, especially if it’s an ally”.

Szijjarto said the Hungarian national assembly was the sovereign parliament of a sovereign country, and its decisions were not based on visits by congressional delegations.

“Our position on the ratification of Sweden’s NATO membership is clear,” Szijjarto said. “We await the Swedish prime minister’s visit to Hungary. I think that if he was able to visit Turkiye during the ratification process, then he can also pay us a visit.”

Read also:

  • Hungarian government does not see Russia as a security threat to any NATO member – Read more HERE
  • Orbán: Ukraine has to be a buffer zone between Russia and NATO

Hungarian government: Hungary committed NATO member

Hungary Defence Forces NATO ministry

Hungary as a committed member of NATO will continue to develop its armed forces, the defence minister said after a meeting of NATO defence ministers in Brussels on Thursday.

Kristóf Szalay-Bobrovniczky told MTI that an increasing number of member states aimed to meet the NATO requirement of spending at least 2 percent of their GDP on defence. “Hungary has fulfilled that requirement since 2023, for which the country has received NATO’s recognition,” he said, adding that it also showed the Hungarian government’s commitment to ensuring security for the Hungarian people and fulfilling NATO’s requirements.

“Toady’s meeting highlighted again the need for NATO member states to increase spending on their own security,” Szalay-Bobrovniczky said.

He noted that the meeting’s main focus was to review and prepare defence issues for a meeting of heads of state and government to be held in Washington, DC, in July to mark the 75th anniversary of NATO. These include finalising NATO’s plan on enhancing the alliance’s collective defence force, and its effectiveness will feature high on the July meeting’s agenda, the minister said.

The need to expand defence industry capacities was also highlighted at Thursday’s meeting, the minister said, adding that Hungary was “at the forefront in this regard since the country already began building its own defence industry base before the war broke out in Ukraine”.

“We must continue modernising the Hungarian Armed Forces, and as a member on NATO’s eastern flank we must take a significant share in strengthening the alliance’s defence capabilities,” the minister added.

He called it a priority for Hungary to further strengthen NATO’s multinational division headquarters in Szekesfehervar, in central Hungary, in partnership with Croatia and Slovakia.

The NATO-Ukraine Council also held a meeting on Thursday at which the Ukrainian defence minister gave an outline of the situation in his country, while NATO members reviewed support provided to Ukraine so far, Szalay-Bobrovniczky said, adding that Hungary’s position was unchanged in that it would not supply weapons to Ukraine and only a prompt ceasefire and peace negotiations could end the war.

Read also:

  • Hungary will accept Sweden’s NATO bid next week? – Read more HERE
  • Hungarian government does not see Russia as a security threat to any NATO member

Hungarian protesters’ banner in Stockholm: Hungary ≠ Orbán – PHOTOS

zoltán keresztény banner stockholm

Zoltán Keresztény, known for his protest actions across Hungary since the summer of 2023, travelled to Stockholm on Wednesday to demonstrate. Taking up a banner in front of the Swedish Parliament, he wanted to let people know that Orbán is not equal to Hungary.

“It is important for Swedes to know that we are not equal to a pseudo-nationalist, pseudo-Christian government that serves Putin’s interests and is now involved in a paedophile affair,” Zoltán Keresztény said, according to 444.hu.

As part of their demonstration in support of Swedish NATO membership, Keresztény and his partner unfurled a banner in front of the Swedish parliament building with the words HUNGARY ≠ ORBÁN next to the Hungarian and EU flags and the logo of Keresztény’s Orbán-cabinet-critical NGO, Újratervezés.

“We are in front of the Swedish Parliament in Stockholm, where we have taken a banner saying:

Comrade Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is not equal to Hungary. It is important that the Swedes also know that we are not equal to the pseudo-nationalist, pseudo-Christian government, which serves Putin’s interests and is now involved in a paedophile affair, and which is constantly preventing Sweden from joining NATO, and thus also preventing us Hungarians from being safer.

This is also a message to the Swedes that the Hungarian people know that NATO will be stronger with them and that a strong NATO is in Hungary’s national interest. But a weaker NATO can only be in the interests of ex-KGB agent Putin, who wants to tear Europe apart. In this, he has found an ally in his comrade Viktor Orbán. Their plan must be thwarted in every possible way,”

Keresztény wrote in a Facebook post.

“TT, Sweden’s largest news agency, was also out here. It was very well received. The Swedish people are grateful,”

Kersztény told 444.hu about the operation.

Read also:

Hungarian government does not see Russia as a security threat to any NATO member

Vladimir Putin

Croatia and Hungary’s relations are weakest in the field of energy, Péter Szijjártó, the minister of foreign affairs and trade, told Croatian news agency HINA in an interview published on Tuesday.

Szijjártó attended on Monday the inauguration of a local primary school in Petrinja that had been damaged in an earthquake and rebuilt with 8.7 billion forints (EUR 22.5m) of Hungarian government support.

He called the fully rebuilt school “proof of the friendship between Hungary and Croatia and their people”.

In the interview to HINA, Szijjártó said the two countries’ relations were strongest on the protection of the identity and cultural heritage of each other’s national minorities, which he said “could be used as a benchmark in Europe.” At the same time, energy cooperation is the “weakest link” in bilateral ties, he added.

Szijjártó said he understood that regaining ownership of the INA oil company was a key issue for the Croatian government, but “this should not be considered as an issue between the two states”. Talks on this, he said, should be carries out with Hungarian oil and gas company MOL, which is a Hungarian company, but not state-owned.

The minister said he had told his Croatian partners on multiple occasions that Hungary understood that this was a problem, but it had to be kept separate from every other aspect of bilateral cooperation. He added that the Croatian government seemed not to be ready for this.

According to MOL, Croatian oil pipeline operator Janaf was charging a “disproportionately high and unfair” transit fee for its services.

Szijjártó said that the situation should not be “ideologised or politicised” because the matter was a technical one. Hungary, he noted, can only buy natural gas from Russia via Ukraine or from Janaf operating the Croatian section of the Adria pipeline.

Janaf does not have the capacities to be able to make up for a potential shutdown of the pipeline delivering oil from Russia, Szijjártó said. He said that if there had been a “real will” to increase the pipeline’s capacity, there would have been progress in the two years since the start of the war in Ukraine, “but nothing has happened”, adding that Budapest was concerned by this.

He pointed out that supply security was a key issue for Hungary, and Janaf had only offered a three-month agreement and raised prices significantly since the start of the war.

As regards European Union enlargement, Szijjártó said the project would remain incomplete until all Western Balkan countries are EU members. Hungary believes the EU needs the Western Balkans more than the other way round, he added.

He said the bloc was suffering from losing its competitiveness, war fatigue and from becoming less relevant in global politics. Enlargement would give the EU “freshness” and new momentum, he said, adding that Hungary will put significant emphasis on speeding up the process during its presidency of the Council of the EU in the second half of the year.

Hungary has a vested interest in the stability of the Western Balkans, so the Hungarian government opposes EU sanctions against Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik, Szijjártó said. He said European sanctions had never been effective anywhere, so there was no point in sanctioning a democratically elected leader as that “would only make the situation worse”. Instead, Budapest urges dialogue, he said, adding that his discussions with Dodik made it clear that he was committed to a European path for his country.

The minister said the acceleration of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s EU membership should be used as a “common denominator” that would unite the country’s leaders and nationalities and ease tensions.

Meanwhile, he said Serbia “can join the European Union easily tomorrow”, and as the “biggest and strongest” country in the region, there could be no stability in the Western Balkans without it.

He said Serbia was a proud nation, adding that the “bureaucracy in Brussels” should change its approach to the country, and that instead of “lecturing”, they should communicate “eye to eye”.

He said linking Serbia’s EU membership to the normalisation of ties with Kosovo was unfair to Belgrade, arguing that this was not solely up to Serbia.

Meanwhile, Szijjártó expressed disagreement with recent remarks by certain Western military leaders, citing Denmark’s defence minister as saying that a Russian attack on a NATO country in a few years could not be ruled out.

“Why would they do so? NATO is much stronger than Russia … Why would one attack someone who is much stronger? Why would that make sense for Russia?” Szijjártó said.

“I do not see Russia as a security threat to any NATO member state at all.”

Read also:

  • Hungary will accept Sweden’s NATO bid next week? – Read more HERE
  • Biden cabinet disappointed: PM Orbán leads Hungary out from NATO by boycotting Sweden?

Orbán: Ukraine has to be a buffer zone between Russia and NATO

zelensky orbán

Hungarian PM Viktor Orbán has once again sharply criticised Ukraine. According to Orbán Ukraine adds nothing to the defence of Europe. He added that the West is in decline, and the European Parliament is, in fact, a madhouse.

Ukraine as a buffer zone?

According to HVG, Orbán believes that the Ukrainian state should serve as a buffer zone between Russia and the West, with adequate security guarantees. Former Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang Schüssel spoke to Viktor Orbán for the opening issue of European Voices, a new magazine produced in cooperation with Die Presse, the Austrian Foreign Policy Association and the UN.

In the interview, the Hungarian prime minister stressed that if Kyiv cannot play its role as a buffer, it will lose territory because Moscow will attack it again and again. There is no way that Russia will allow a state that is a member of the EU and NATO on its doorstep.

Ukraine is not defending Europe

Orbán did not agree that the Ukrainians were defending Europe, unlike Hungary in 1956. They do not, he argued, provide any extra security to the western half of the continent because these countries are already in NATO, which is much stronger than Russia. He sees no chance of the Kremlin giving orders to invade any member of NATO.

The PM believes that Europe is not able to supply enough weapons to the Ukrainians because public opinion already resents the support. Therefore, a dialogue on a ceasefire should start immediately, but at the same time, talks on Kyiv’s accession to the EU and NATO should be held.

West in decline, EP is a “madhouse”

One of the reasons for the weakness of the continent, in his reading, is the dysfunction of the European Parliament, “because it is, in fact, a madhouse”.

In his view, we should return to the idea of representatives being delegated by the Member States and not directly elected. And the European Commission should not aspire to be the European Council because it is the Heads of State and Government who have the say.

Orbán sees the greatest threat to the continent in Russia and the US concluding a security agreement over its head. The shift of the centre of gravity of the world economy to Asia is also a serious problem. Orbán says we are witnessing a change of era that happens every 500 years: the end of the West’s leadership.

The Prime Minister said that it is difficult for him to find common ground with American democrats, because in his view, it is not universal values but Hungarian interests that must take precedence. This is precisely why he appreciates Donald Trump’s foreign policy, as it is based on similar principles. And Europe must both cooperate and rival the United States, he said.

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Hungary will accept Sweden’s NATO bid next week?

Viktor Orbán NATO summit

That is the only way PM Orbán and his Fidesz-KDNP coalition could accept Katalin Novák’s resignation, nominate another presidential candidate, and end the scandal that broke the career of the two leading female politicians of Orbán’s party. In such a session, the parliament could accept even Sweden’s NATO bid.

President Katalin Novák resigned yesterday, but the parliament has to accept her decision to leave the office. However, the national assembly’s regular session will only start in end-February. Thus, it may happen that Fidesz will convene an extraordinary session to end the scandal. We wrote about Novák’s presidential pardon and the public outcry it caused in THIS article.

Telex.hu asked Fidesz’s parliamentary group whether they plan to do so but received no answers.

An extraordinary session could end both scandals?

Péter Szijjártó, Hungary’s foreign minister, said yesterday that the Hungarian parliament could vote for Sweden’s NATO accession in end-February. He complained that the Swedish prime minister did not visit Hungary like he visited Türkiye before. Hvg.hu believes that is because the Turkish president had clear demands while PM Orbán has nothing like that.

Hungarian politicians keep repeating that some of their MPs were offended by the statements of Swedish politicians claiming there was a dictatorship in Hungary.

If the government wants to close both issues quickly, they may convene a session for next week. But Fidesz’s parliamentary group leader, Máté Kocsis, did not mention such a scenario in his interview yesterday, concerning the resignation of the president.

Kocsis: President Novák, former Justice Minister Varga made ‘responsible decision’

Katalin Novák and Judit Varga “have made a responsible decision, which we respect”, Mate Kocsis, the group leader of ruling Fidesz, said on his Facebook page on Saturday, referring to their resignation announcements as president of the republic and MP, respectively.

Kocsis said he was grateful to both of them for their work, and thanked them for keeping the interests of the community in mind in the course of their work.

“Their resignation is evidence that, when it comes to the right wing, mistakes have consequences, while on the left even crimes do not,” Kocsis said, adding that the left wing, “still led by Ferenc Gyurcsany”, had “hypocritically attacked” Novak and Varga. He accused Gyurcsany of having led a “cavalry charge against his countrymen in 2006” and living in a villa “stolen from a Jewish family”.

“No one on the left has apologised to voters for calling them rats, for threatening to hang them from lamp posts, for insulting them; as likewise there are no consequences for the corruption in Budapest … and antifa bloodshed…” he said.

Novak and Varga’s decision, Kocsis said, testified to this moral difference.

Read also:

  • If Sweden wants to join the NATO, their prime minister will have to travel to Budapest – Details in THIS article
  • Hungarian President resigns after pardoning paedophile helper

Hungarian President calls for closer ties with Armenia

Novák Armenia

President Katalin Novák, receiving Armenian counterpart Vahagn Khachaturyan in Budapest on Tuesday, said ties between the country should be strengthened and “filled with content”.

During his first official visit to Hungary, the Armenian president and Novák discussed “issues around peace in the world, Hungary’s efforts to provide humanitarian aid to Armenia, demographic challenges, bilateral ties, minorities, as well as a European outlook for Armenia,” Novák said.

Diplomatic ties with Armenia were re-established in 2022, and Khachaturyan is the second Armenian president to visit Hungary, Novák noted. At their talks, the two presidents also agreed to launch a cultural cooperation schedule for Hungary and Armenia.

The agreement signed on behalf of Hungary by Balázs Hankó, the deputy state secretary for higher education, caters to strengthening bilateral relations in higher education, science, technology and culture.

Regarding the Hungary Helps programme, in which Hungary has donated 40 million forints to Armenian families for medical care, another aspect of the scheme will enable around 1,000 children forced to leave their homes to camp in Hungary.

The president said the Armenian minority in Hungary, which was awarded government support of 2 billion forints between 2011 and 2023, was strengthening and developing, and the community has expanded by 18 percent since 2011.

Trade turnover grew eleven-fold to 29 million dollars over the span of 20 years. Hungary also offers 30 Stipendium Hungaricum scholarships to Armenian youth, she noted, adding that Hungary Helps also aids members of persecuted Christian communities.

Novák pledged its support for Armenia in forging close ties with Europe and advancing visa liberalisation when it takes over the presidency of the Council of the European Union.

Meanwhile, asked about Sweden’s NATO accession, Novák said she favoured early ratification and she had asked the Hungarian MPs to vote for it. She said she had spoken yesterday with Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson by phone and encouraged him to visit Hungary as soon as possible for talks with herself and the prime minister.

Regarding the political opposition furore over a presidential pardon given to an official connected with a paedophile, the president said that pedophilia was “disgusting and the most serious crime”. There would be no pardon for paedophiles during her presidency, she said, adding that she had led action against child abusers with the introduction of a register of sex offenders. The justification for the presidential pardon could not be made public for legal reasons, she said.

Khachaturyan welcomed “a new era in Armenian-Hungarian relations” when the two countries “have an opportunity to restart ties, which may offer huge opportunities.”

Meanwhile, he said both Russia and Ukraine have large Armenian communities and “they are now fighting each other, which is unacceptable.” The Armenian president thanked Novák for Hungary’s support for ethnic Armenians.

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Biden cabinet disappointed: PM Orbán leads Hungary out from NATO by boycotting Sweden?

PM Viktor Orbán Joe Biden NATO - diplomacy

There was an extraordinary parliamentary session yesterday, on 5 February, in Hungary. However, the lawmakers could not ratify Sweden’s NATO accession because PM Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz and KDNP did not take part in the session, so it lacked a quorum. The USA is disappointed in Hungary, and Orbán’s moves raise concerns among NATO allies about whether Hungary can be trusted or is an ally of Putin.

The matter is important for Washington and other NATO allies. That was clearly shown by the fact that representatives of 16 NATO Allies attended the extraordinary session. US Ambassador David Pressman was among them, and said, leaving the chamber, that Sweden’s NATO membership directly affects the United States’ national security, Reuters wrote.

“This is about the security of Hungary, of the United States, and of the entire NATO Alliance. We look forward to Hungary’s urgent action”, Mr Pressman concluded his post.

Better ties with Russia than other EU and NATO members

“The Prime Minister pledged to convene parliament, to urge parliament to act at its earliest opportunity, today was an opportunity to do that,” Pressman added.

Reuters wrote that PM Orbán had better ties with Russia than other EU and NATO members. The relevant bill has been stranded in the parliament since mid-2022 despite government promises.

Orbán’s Fidesz said today that the Hungarian Parliament would only give the green light for Sweden if the Swedish Prime Minister, Ulf Kristersson, visited Hungary. Just like he did in the case of Türkiye, another NATO member who boycotted the accession before.

Sweden has not commented on that claim. Before, they said the prime minister would only come to Budapest after the acceptance of Sweden’s NATO bid.

The Hungarian parliament will start its regular session in end-February. The Hungarian diplomacy has time until then to convince Stockholm about an official visit to Budapest. Otherwise, this will be the second visible loss for Orbán in foreign policy in just one month.

The other one was in Brussels last week when he accepted the EU’s EUR 50 billion aid for Ukraine without receiving anything in return. Hungary did not get more money from the frozen RRF and development funds, he did not get an annual veto concerning the payment process of that money. Meanwhile, Ukraine got everything they wanted.

Will Sweden rescue Orbán?

In the case of Sweden, even experts do not know why PM Orbán decided to veto the country’s NATO accession. Some believe that is how he wanted to support President Erdogan. If that is the truth, the Turkish leader may have set him up since they accepted Stockholm’s bid urgently in January and let Hungary alone with Budapest’s boycott.

As a result, many may think in Washington or Brussels that Hungary might be in an alliance with Russia. However, the Ukraine aid showed that Orbán does not want to use his veto in case he remains alone. That is why they could agree even before the start of the extraordinary Brussels session. And probably that is why the Hungarian parliament will vote for Sweden’s NATO accession. The one-million-dollar question is whether Sweden will choose to rescue Orbán’s dignity by ‘sending’ their prime minister to Budapest before the end-February parliament session. If not, it might happen that Orbán will have to accept a phone call and the possibility of a future meeting.

Evidently, the Hungarian government-close media will sell every scenario as a victory.

Read also:

  • Russians outraged: ‘PM Orbán betrayed us!’ – Read more HERE
  • If Sweden wants to join the NATO, their prime minister will have to travel to Budapest – Details in THIS article

Featured image: illustration

If Sweden wants to join the NATO, their prime minister will have to travel to Budapest – UPDATED

Sweden NATO Ulf Kristersson Georgia

Hungary’s parliament could ratify Sweden’s NATO accession “early in the regular spring session”, but a meeting between the Hungarian and Swedish prime ministers in Budapest is necessary for that to happen, the group leader of ruling Fidesz said on Monday.

“If joining [NATO] is important for the Swedes, they will come here, just like they went to Türkiye,” Máté Kocsis said in a Facebook post.

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Hungarian foreign minister discusses Sweden’s NATO accession with Estonian counterpart

Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó discussed Sweden’s NATO accession with his Estonian counterpart Margus Tsahkna on Monday, reassuring him that the Hungarian government maintained its “positive approach” to the matter.

Speaking during a break in a cabinet meeting in Sopronbanfalva, in north-western Hungary, Szijjártó said he had spoken with Tsahkna by phone to discuss several key issues concerning both countries. He said he had reassured his counterpart that the Hungarian government’s positive approach to Sweden’s NATO bid was unchanged, and that the bill approving Sweden’s membership had long ago been submitted to parliament.

“I informed the minister that we have invited Sweden’s prime minister to Hungary, and I hope he will accept the invitation and come, because that will prove that this is indeed an important matter for Sweden,” Szijjártó said, according to a ministry statement.

Szijjártó said he and Tsahkna had also discussed the sanctions imposed on Russia, underlining that Hungary’s position was clear on this matter as well. “We believe the sanctions policy has failed, so we don’t see a reason to approve more sanctions packages,” he said.

He noted that the European Union plans to approve more sanctions against Russia on the occasion of the coming second anniversary of the outbreak of the war.

“I think it’s completely pointless to make this aspect of the EU’s functioning even more frivolous with the show of a sanctions package,” he said.

Szijjártó noted that the Hungarian government had made it clear at meetings in Brussels this past weekend that Hungary would not approve any kind of sanctions affecting the energy sector or the nuclear industry, or any that endangered the EU’s foreign relations.

Meanwhile, the minister said he and Tsahkna were in agreement that though there were issues on which their two countries disagreed, this was natural, and there were far more things that bound them together, and they had “far more shared strategic interests than we would think”.

He said they had agreed to boost bilateral ties, and that he had invited Tsahkna to Budapest. Tsahkna, he added, had “gladly accepted the invitation, and he will hopefully pay us a visit before the start of our EU presidency.”

Hungarian parliament will vote for Sweden’s NATO accession today? – UPDATED

Hungarian government parliament crisis Hungarian House Speaker

On the initiative of opposition parties, Speaker of Parliament László Kövér has convened and extraordinary session of parliament for Monday.

At the session proposed by the Socialists and backed by the Democratic Coalition (DK), Momentum, Jobbik, Párbeszéd and LMP, lawmakers will discuss two opposition proposals and vote on Sweden’s NATO accession. Parliament discussed the latter matter last March, with only the parliamentary vote needed for the ratification of Sweden’s bid.

Read also:

  • PM Orbán got into serious trouble in the NATO: what will follow? – Read more HERE
  • If Sweden wants to join the NATO, their prime minister will have to travel to Budapest – Details in THIS article

UPDATED: Special parliament session called by opposition on Sweden’s NATO membership lacks quorum

In the absence of the governing parties, the special session of parliament initiated by the opposition, which was to have included a vote on Sweden’s NATO accession, lacked a quorum.

At Monday’s session proposed by the Socialists and backed by the Democratic Coalition (DK), Momentum, Jobbik, Párbeszéd and LMP, lawmakers were set to discuss two opposition proposals as well as Sweden’s NATO accession.

Parliament debated the latter last March, but the ratification vote was not held.

Addressing the session, LMP lawmaker Mate Kanász-Nagy called it “sad” that none of the members of government were in attendance, adding it was “embarrassing” that the governing parties kept on blocking Sweden’s NATO accession without giving a reasonable explanation.

Bence Tordai, the group-leader of Párbeszéd, cited Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s pledge that parliament would ratify Sweden’s accession “on the first possible” occasion. He said the government had not been guided “by Hungary’s national interest, but by something else”, adding that “we should not forget who it is in both the EU and NATO who represents the interests of an aggressor [who started] a war”.

Előd Novák, deputy head of Mi Hazank, called for Sweden’s accession to be vetoed, arguing that its accession “would be another step towards a [third] world war and a provocation”.

“Maintaining a neutral buffer zone between Russia and NATO would serve to preserve the fragile balance,” he added.

Koloman Brenner, group leader of Jobbik-Conservatives, said the “sad game” played by the government against Finland and Sweden’s NATO accession went against Hungary’s national interest.

“Viktor Orbán and Fidesz is becoming Putin’s puppet in the eyes of our NATO allies and the European public,” he said, calling the absence of Fidesz lawmakers at the session “shameful and a disgrace”.

Fidesz: Sweden has lost our trust, we have not engaged in blackmail

Gulyás Gergely Fidesz

Gulyás said the government supported Sweden’s NATO accession and had submitted the issue to parliament. At the same time, he said it was important that “the vote takes place when the necessary majority is at hand, and that requires strengthening trust.”

Sweden and Hungary

“Since trust was lost due to the Swedes, this is their job,” Gulyás said. “Hungary has not engaged in blackmail or set conditions,” he added. The Swedish prime minister has been invited to Hungary, he noted.

He said the decision was now in the hands of the ruling parties’ parliamentary groups, noting that they command a two-thirds majority in parliament.

If the government made a mistake, it was making a promise on ratification that it could not fulfil on its own authority, he said. Sweden’s accession would strengthen NATO but not to a significant degree, he said.

Regarding teachers’ wage hikes, Gulyás said teachers working in disadvantaged regions or with children in difficult circumstances were eligible for additional income and the majority of teachers were happy with the increase.

Responding to a question on the National Consultation public survey, Gulyás said the survey was a means to boost the government’s position in the EU, where it was in opposition “on countless issues”. He said a large majority of Hungarian citizens had responded, thereby underpinning the government’s negotiating position.

Asked about a town hall meeting in Sóskút, near Budapest, regarding a planned metal recycling plant using cutting-edge technology which would create 160 jobs, Gulyás said it was “unacceptable” that the mayor and the head of the company looking to build the plant nearby had had to be rescued from the room. Issues such as worries over excessive water demand, a usual objection in the case of battery plants, “does not arise in this case”, he said. The town hall meeting would have been a way for residents to be fully consulted on the project, he added.

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Budapest

Meanwhile, Gulyás said Fidesz’s candidate for Budapest mayor in the local elections this year would be named by March. Fidesz will field its own candidate, but not necessarily a party member, he said.

On another topic, Gulyás said the government hoped the revamped Belgrade-Budapest railway line would be up and running in this government cycle.

Also, the government “is hoping to announce” the purchase of Liszt Ferenc International Airport “within weeks”, Gulyás said.

Regarding a possible tightening of Hungary’s child protection law, Gulyás said that enforcing current legislation “would put Hungary in a very good position in European comparison”. At the same time, he said all amendment proposals would be considered.

In response to a question concerning whether local governments could keep operating such services if they finance them, he said health services were not a state monopoly and if any local government wanted to set up a doctor’s surgery, it was free to do so, and it would not be part of the state service.

Commenting on temporary suspension of certain hospital services, he said there were 38 such instances in the whole of Hungary in January, of which 8 only applied for a few hours and 5 for one day. Only three services had been suspended for more than 2 months, he added.

About Péter Szijjártó

Commenting on Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó’s talks in Qatar, he said that until the final agreement was signed on LNG imports to Hungary he was unable to provide information on the possible routes or volumes. Hungary, he added, was ready to receive LNG but this is more expensive than piped gas.

He said the government was dedicated to diversification, but as long as several routes were available, Hungary must purchase the cheapest gas.

Gulyás welcomed Szijjártó’s recent talks with his Ukrainian counterpart, noting that the foreign minister had focused on demanding the restoration of the rights of ethnic Hungarians in Transcarpathia.

Commenting on the participation of Gáspár Orbán, the son of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, in a military mission in Chad, he said it was the role of the defence minister to appoint people for certain tasks. In response to a question, he said the fact that a soldier who spoke a foreign language was a member of a negotiating delegation was unproblematic.

Far-right activists

Commenting on preparations for the day, February 11, when far-right activists mark the failed attempt by Nazi and allied Hungarian soldiers to break out of Budapest in 1945, he said the responsible authorities were working on it. At the same time, he added that the requirement to guarantee the freedom of movement made it difficult to prevent “far-right imports” from western Europe.

Regulations have already been amended to better restrict extremist gatherings, he said, adding that Budapest was “an island of peace in Europe” and the government was making every effort for this to remain the case. He said Hungary was cooperating with European Union allies concerning action taken against extremists.

Economy

In response to a question concerning potential plans to introduce caps on the price of fuel, he said the last time this had been done, the price of petrol would have been around 900 forints (EUR 2.4) per litre without the caps, which he said was currently far from being the case.

Commenting on a proposal by the Integrity Authority to amend the system of asset declarations, he said the proposal was worth considering. At the same time, he said Hungary’s asset declaration system was one of the most comprehensive in Europe.

In response to a question on solar panel tenders, he said no EU funding had been received so far except one advance payment. The left wing in Hungary, he said, was working to hinder EU payments for this project, adding that certain tenders had slowed down in order to see “if the monies can be acquired despite the efforts of the left wing”, he said.

Commenting on a question concerning the grandfather of pro-government publicist Zsolt Bayer, he said it was a reasonable expectation from anyone that if their parents or grandparents had committed crimes, they should make this clear. At the same time, “we must not punish the sons for the crimes of the fathers”, he added.

He also said that the grandfather of Klára Dobrev, the potential prime ministerial candidate of the Left, had been a “communist mass murderer”. Whereas Bayer has written a sincere article facing up to his grandfather’s actions, “no such thing could be seen from Dobrev”, he added.

In response to a question about “secret agent files”, he said there were no secret agent files, only state security documents, and “the government has done more than anyone else to make them public”. Some of these documents were stolen, he said, and others were counterfeit. Whereas some of the people called secret agents indeed deserved contempt, he said, others had been actually forced by blackmail to submit reports, and they would still not report anything, he added.