Hungary’s Orbn to take EU reins as tensions build

1 July 2024

Orbn has vocally opposed and threatened to block Ukraine’s candidacy. His government has also held up EU efforts to supply Ukraine with badly needed funding…reports Asian Lite News

When Hungary takes over the helm of the European Union on July 1, many politicians in Brussels will have the same thing on their minds: whether populist Prime Minister Viktor Orbn will use the role to further his reputation as the bloc’s main spoiler.

Orbn in recent years has seemed to relish opportunities to block, water down or delay key EU decisions, routinely going against the grain of most other leaders on issues like the war in Ukraine, relations with Russia and China, and efforts to defend democracy and the rule of law.

His public opposition to EU policies and stances has long frustrated his partners in the bloc and pushed him to the margins of the continent’s mainstream. Hungary’s motto for its presidency Make Europe Great Again raised eyebrows for its resemblance to the famous tagline of former U.S. President Donald Trump.

The EU presidency rotates among its member countries, and while the post holds little real power, it does allow countries to put their priorities high on Europe’s agenda.

Now, as Hungary resides over the 27-nation bloc for the coming six months, it will likely keep up its anti-EU rhetoric, said Dorka Takcsy, a research fellow at the Centre for Euro-Atlantic Integration and Democracy.

But the timeline of its presidency beginning with a lengthy summer break and a transitional period of forming a new European Parliament and executive commission will give Budapest few opportunities to derail the bloc’s priorities significantly, she said.

“These six months are altogether not that long, which means that … Hungary cannot do potentially much harm, even according to the critics,” Takcsy said.

As Hungary’s takeover approached, leaders in Brussels rushed to push through important policy decisions while Belgium was still at the helm. On Tuesday, for example, the EU launched membership talks with candidate countries Ukraine and Moldova.

Orbn has vocally opposed and threatened to block Ukraine’s candidacy. His government has also held up EU efforts to supply Ukraine with badly needed funding.

Yet with Ukraine’s accession process already initiated, Takcsy said, the most Hungary can do now under its presidency is delay further steps toward its EU membership, a process that in any scenario is likely to take many years.

All the meaningful steps from the European side regarding Ukraine were already done,” she said. (A Hungarian) delay, according to most European leaders, is already calculated and being taken into consideration as if it’s something which is most likely going to happen.

Orbn has long been accused of dismantling democratic institutions and violating the EU’s standards on the rule of law, leading the bloc’s legislature in May to call for the presidency to be taken out of Hungary’s hands entirely.

In a resolution, the EU parliament argued that democratic deficiencies raised questions of how Hungary will be able to credibly fulfill this task in 2024. Two years ago, the European Commission froze billions of euros in funds to Budapest over concerns about democratic backsliding by the government.

But some Hungarian officials have stressed that they plan to act constructively during their presidency. Last week, Hungarian minister for EU affairs Jnos Bka told reporters that we will be honest brokers, working loyally with all Member States and institutions.

Carrying out the functions of the presidency is our obligation, but we see it primarily as an opportunity,” Bka said. At the beginning of the new institutional cycle, we can initiate a debate and set the agenda on issues that are important to us.

Among the issues that Hungary has prioritised in its seven-point program is the enlargement of the EU in the Western Balkans for countries like Serbia, North Macedonia, Montenegro and Albania through a merit-based procedure.

Budapest has also vowed to strengthen the EU’s external borders and step up against illegal immigration, and to address demographic challenges that involve an aging population in Europe two priorities that reflect Orbn’s image as a staunch opponent of immigration and defender of family values.

But after years of campaigns portraying the EU as forcing unwanted policies on Hungary Orbn has repeatedly compared membership in the bloc to more than four decades of Soviet occupation of his country he may find it difficult to restore goodwill among his EU partners.

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