Explainer-What will the EU do about Hungary's Orban?
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[April 08, 2022]
By Gabriela Baczynska
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Emboldened by his
landslide electoral victory, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has
raised the stakes in his many fights with the European Union - ranging
from liberal democratic rights to ties with Russia as it wages war on
Ukraine.
Breaking ranks with the EU, which seeks a unified front in opposing
Moscow's demand for rouble gas payments, the 58-year old nationalist
said Budapest could pay in Russian currency.
Here is what is at stake in the battles between the 27-nation EU and
Orban, what the bloc is going to do next, and how long it will take.
WHAT'S THE PROBLEM?
In presenting plans for his new term, Orban said Budapest would not
change its stance on gender issues despite EU criticism that he has
restricted the rights of gays.
In 12 years in power, Orban has also tightened restrictions around
media, academics, political opposition, NGOs and migrants - such
policies flying into the face of the liberal democratic tenets of the
EU.
The U.S. rights advocacy Freedom House classifies Hungary as "partly
free", the only EU country failing below the "free" score but polling at
par with Ukraine, Tunisia and India.
Transparency International ranks Hungary 73rd out of 180 countries
globally on its Corruption Perceptions Index, with Bulgaria being the
only EU country falling behind.
The Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe said the Apr.3
vote was free but not fair, "marred by the absence of a level playing
field" and undue advantages for Orban's Fidesz.
WHAT HAS THE EU DONE SO FAR?
Citing corruption, the EU's executive European Commission - tasked with
upholding the law across member states - has blocked access to 7.2
billion euros earmarked for Hungary to help lift economies from the
COVID slump.
"That will not be paid for the foreseeable future," an EU diplomat said
this week of funds worth about 5% of Hungary's economic output.
The EU's most prominent tool so far for protecting the rule of law more
broadly is known as "Article 7" and envisages maximum punishment of
stripping a country of its right to vote on matters affecting the entire
bloc.
But it has proven ineffective as Orban's nationalist allies in Poland
have barred the required unanimity of all other member states apart from
the one in the dock.
As Warsaw and Budapest dug in their heels, the EU's battles with
nationalist rulers damaging its cohesion from within emerged as an
existential challenge at par with the COVID pandemic, climate change and
fraught ties with China and Russia.
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Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban holds a news conference after
the parliamentary election in Budapest, Hungary April 6, 2022.
REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo/File Photo
WHAT MORE WILL THE EU DO?
"There is little hope there will be any appetite from the
government to start reestablishing democracy," said a French green
EU lawmaker, Gwendoline Delbos-Corfield, adding the EU should
escalate its response.
The bloc will now be stepping up efforts to cut
funds to Hungary.
The Brussels-based Commission announced the
launching of a new sanction tool that could block Hungary's access
to any and all money from its 2021-27 budget worth a total of 1.1
trillion euros.
Some EU countries also want to press on with Article 7, with the
next discussion - but no decisions - about Hungary due on May 13
among ministers of the 27 countries.
BUT?
Beyond keeping up pressure on Hungary, there is little hope that
Warsaw would unlock the Article 7 punishment even though Budapest's
dovish stance vis-à-vis Russia has now strained Orban's alliance
with the Polish government.
The new, so-called "conditionality mechanism" to block access to EU
cash for those violating laws has yet to be tested. It is unclear
how exactly it would work since it has been prescribed vaguely
enough to get Orban and Warsaw on board.
European Budget Commissioner Johannes Hahn said it would take
Brussels 6-9 months before it would propose that EU countries
authorise cutting money for Hungary. He declined to say how much
Hungary could lose exactly and other officials said it would only
happen in gradual steps.
Member states would have up to three months to adopt the
recommendation by qualified majority rather than unanimity.
That means meting out punishment would be easier this time and
countries including Germany and France would fall under pressure to
show their true colours rather than hide behind Warsaw blocking
sanctions on Budapest.
As the EU launches a new campaign against Orban, a senior EU
diplomat expressed concern Budapest might block the bloc's climate
policies in retaliation.
"There is a degree of nervousness about what he might do now," said
the person, who spoke under condition of anonymity. "We are
potentially heading into a very difficult period with Hungary. How
far does Orban want to take it?"
(Additional reporting by Jan Strupczewski, John Chalmers, Writing by
Gabriela Baczynska, Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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