Hungary: the litmus test for democracy

by Joseph P. Forgas

The last few decades saw the emergence of populist, anti-liberal political movements in a number of countries that have taken political scientists and psychologists by surprise. The rejection of the liberal democratic model is puzzling, considering that Western liberal democracies have produced previously unimaginable levels of freedom, justice, fairness, equality, prosperity, tolerance and decency. Within Europe, over the past 12 years Hungary has become a self-professed champion of illiberalism, having metamorphosed into a de-facto one party state under the autocratic rule of Viktor Orban, who is incidentally also Putin’s closest friend and ally in Europe. In the current Ukrainian war the state-controlled Hungarian state media even now follows the Russian narrative.

Why Hungary matters

Hungary’s pattern of descent into autocracy has international ramifications, because it is also happening elsewhere. Orbán’s government completely reshaped the country’s political culture and institutions, illustrating how misleading propaganda, conspiracy theories and Identity politics can be harnessed in the service of ethno-nationalism to destroy a democracy. Hungary has become a successful populist laboratory of what can happen when illiberal governance comes to power. Hungary’s strong man, the diminutive Orbán has many followers not only in Central and Eastern Europe; he is also an active promoter of illiberalism in the Balkans. Orbán also made a great impression on Trump, who showered praise on him for a “tremendous job”. The US ambassador to Hungary, David Cornstein, a close friend of Donald Trump, enthused that Trump would love to have the situation Orbán achieved. 

This is one reason why the forthcoming Hungarian election on April 3rd is of some international interest. This will be a first critical test to see if elections can still provide a last-minute reversal of the populist erosion of democratic principles that are now occurring in many nations. In peaceful times Hungary, just as Estonia, Latvia or Finland, wouldn’t be of importance with its 10 million population which generates barely 0.8% of the EU’s GDP, and rarely commands global attention. This time, it is different.

There is a second important reason why Hungary deserves some attention at this time. Its autocratic ruler, Viktor Orban likes to present himself as a champion of conservative values, the family and Christianity, and likes to pose as a staunch opponent of the destructive and oppressive neo-marxist woke ideology at Western universities and institutions. It seems that some commentators on the political right have bought this manipulative narrative, and nowadays Orban receives standing ovation at conservative gatherings when he berates Western godlessness and left-wing tyranny.

Paradoxically, Hungary’s lurch towards autocracy is drawing legitimacy from the Western world’s larger shift toward identity politics. The growing backlash against political correctness and gender ideology led the Hungarian leader to realize that attacking the corrosive influence of left-wing western radicals and their zany theories may generate significant support both domestically and internationally. Yet as I argued elsewhere, the success of Orbán’s right-wing autocracy is based on the same populist strategies and ideologies that have been routinely employed by autocratic regimes since the 1930s. Orban’s Hungary has become an example to populist political movements and their leaders such as the AfD, the National Front, Salvini, Kaczynski, Erdogan, Netanyahu, Putin, and many others regularly consult with Orbán.

Those of us who value liberty, individualism and rationality must be very careful not to make common cause with right-wing autocrats like Orban, who is openly disdainful of our enlightenment values, and has done his best to destroy liberal democracy. It is all the more disappointing that some Western conservatives are prepared to legitimize Orban’s repressive autocracy. Douglas Murray accepted the hospitality of Orban’s Danube Institute, Roger Scruton received a medal from Orban, and many academics and public intellectuals on the conservative side flock to well-endowed events organized by Orban’s front organizations such as the Matthias Corvinus College and others. Tucker Carson who appears completely ignorant of the realities of Orban’s repressive domestic rule in Hungary, was happy to endorse him recently as a defender of conservative values. The credibility of classical liberalism can be seriously damaged by associating with right-wing dictators like Orban. This is one of the reasons why paying some attention to Hungary at this time may be of interest.

From democracy to autocracy

After the collapse of the soviet system, Hungary was widely seen as one of the most promising post-communist countries likely to make a successful transition from dictatorship to democracy. Unfortunately, this is not how it turned out. In the past 12 years Hungary’s ruler Viktor Orban turned his back on democratic principles, dismantled or subjugated democratic institutions and turned Hungary into a de-facto one party state, described by him in Orwellian Newspeak as the ‘System of National Cooperation’.

Some background may be in order. Orban was elected in 2010 in a free and fair election to replace the discredited previous centre-left government. He immediately proceeded to dismantle the democratic institutions that he saw as limiting his quest for absolute power, seeking to transform Hungary into what he brazenly called an ‘illiberal democracy’ (sic). He enacted a new constitution supported only by his own party, and changed the electoral law to entrench his power. Although in both the 2014 and the 2018 elections Fidesz failed to win more than 50 percent of all votes cast, it both times it secured a two-thirds parliamentary majority.

In an extraordinary speech on July 26th, 2014, Mr. Orbán openly declared that Hungary is turning its back on liberal democracy. Praising autocratic states such as China, Turkey and Russia, he stated that we have to abandon liberal methods and principles of organizing society, as well as the liberal way of looking at the world… because liberal values today incorporate corruption, sex and violence. Orban often contrasts the “vitality of the work-based economy of the healthy, Eastern peoples as against the tired, immoral, Western citizens subjugated by finance capitalism.”

Key positions like the public prosecutor’s office, judicial authorities, heads of government agencies, the tax office were staffed with party loyalists appointed for 9 years. The public broadcaster and 90% of the media are now under party control and taxpayer’s funds are shamelessly used for party propaganda. Corruption has reached unprecedented levels under Orban’s rule. His childhood friend, a barely literate former gas-fitter has become the richest man in Hungary in just a few years by corruptly receiving countless EU funded government contracts. Orban’s son-in-law has been accused of racketeering and criminal conspiracy to defraud the EU by OLAF, the EU’s investigative agency, recommending prosecution, but Orban’s man at the head of the public prosecutor’s office, Peter Polt, did nothing.

Orban’s strategies to entrench his power are not without historical precedent, but he has been more cunning and more successful than many would-be populist autocrats. Political scientists debate how best to characterize Hungary’s populist autocracy. Some call it a quasi-fascist state, as Orbán’s propaganda methods fomenting division, hatred and nationalism employ the methods used by Mussolini, Goebbels and Hitler. Others define it as a post-communist mafia state, focusing on the all-encompassing corruption and godfather-like hierarchical power structure documented in a carefully researched book by Balint Magyar. Transparency International confirms that corruption has become endemic in Hungary since 2010, yet the number of significant corruption prosecutions has dropped to almost zero.

In summary, Mr. Orban has demolished liberal democracy in his country over the last decade. He has used EU taxpayers’ money to consolidate his illiberal regime. The state administration favours Orbán cronies and family members with government contracts, punishes independent media owners and NGOs or opposition supporters with arbitrary tax investigations, uses state resources for party propaganda. Orban’s party has effectively demolished the independence of the judiciary, as documented in extensive reports by Rui Tavares and Judith Sargentini for the European Parliament. Reports by Transparency International and the European commission have found that in about 50% of public procurement procedures there was only one tender, and the procedures are corrupt. As the Washington Post concluded, what Mr. Orbán offers is little more than the same authoritarian nationalism practised by thugs and charlatans throughout the 20th century – including Hungary’s pro-Nazi world War II regime, and more recently his good friend, Vladimir Putin. Mr. Orbán has excluded himself from the democratic West; he and his government should be treated accordingly.

While the facade of democracy is maintained, checks and balances have been abolished and institutions are compromised. Criticism from the European Parliament, the Venice Commission, the European Commission and the Sargentini report, the commencement of EU sanctions against Hungary under Section 7 of the EU constitution had no discernible effect.

The unrelenting government propaganda appealing to narcissistic beliefs played a crucial role in legitimizing this process. The carefully fueled sense of nationalism, grievance and collective narcissism provide a crucial component, capitalizing on Hungary’s traumatic history to present Orban as the savior of the nation to his gullible followers, a process we document in more detail elsewhere.

The test of the coming election

Of the roughly 8 million Hungarian voters, about a quarter are solid Orban supporters, whose loyalty has been cemented by unrelenting ethno-nationalist propaganda and a wide array of favours and benefits targeted at them.

It is against this depressing background that the forthcoming election on April 3rd is of importance. For the first time in 12 years, the different democratic parties encompassing the entire political spectrum from left to right were able to form a common platform to unseat Orban. In a series of pre-selection votes, a single candidate was chosen for each of the electoral districts to prevent the opposition parties fragmenting their vote. The opposition block was also able to elect a prime ministerial candidate, Mr. Peter Marki-Zay, a conservative Catholic father of seven children who actually believes in and lives the conservative Christian values that Mr. Orban only pretends to have. Marki-Zay was until recently the Mayor of a provincial city, he lived for many years in North America, has multiple university degrees and does appear to be an authentic and decent person and a convinced democrat. Orban’s propaganda machine is now in full swing to attack him often with transparently dishonest accusations.

Orban has done everything in his power to ensure his victory. Tens of thousands of loyalist Orban voters from neighboring countries will be entitled to a postal vote, opening numerous avenues for electoral fraud. In contrast, more than half a million Hungarians who emigrated to Western Europe and are unlikely to be Orban loyalists can only vote in person at embassies, in an effort to reduce their participation. Several fake parties supported by Orban’s cronies have also been registered to further split the opposition vote.

Orban has also done his best to bullet-proof his mafia state against the possibility of an electoral upset. Most state institutions are now run by Orban cronies entrenched for nine years, higher education institutions have been handed over to fake foundations also run by Orban appointees for life, the art world, theaters, museums, and granting organizations have all been centralized and run by party apparatchiks, and Hungary’s oligarchs are mostly in Orban’s camp. Even if the oppositions wins power, they will be confronted by a phalanx of hostile institutions and centres of power, as well as empty state coffers as a result of the reckless pre-election spending.

This is precisely what makes the Hungarian elections potentially so fascinating: can there be a peaceful way back from an entrenched and autocratic one-party state to a functioning pluralistic democracy through an election? Many Hungarian commentators are not convinced. Some argue that Orban’s entire 12 year rule was a violation of fundamental constitutional principles, and a new constitution is needed to bring to justice those who destroyed Hungarian democracy. This however may produce such bitter division and hostility that in practice it may be impracticable. How Hungary handles this election and its aftermath is deserving of international attention, because reversals of populist autocracy by democratic means are all too rare in our political history.

The second message here is no less important. Those who sincerely oppose the creeping authoritarianism of left-wing revolutionaries, cultural Marxists, critical race theorists and gender ideologues in our institutions (and I count myself among them) must not to allow authoritarians from the far right like Orban to seduce us and undermine the credibility of our cause. Surely we cannot make common cause with genocidal dictators like Putin just because he is also on record berating the absurdities of political correctness in in our institutions? In the same way, any cooperation with Orban can only harm the cause of liberty. Orban has been the closest supporter of Putin within the EU, doing Putin’s bidding on numerous issues, including repeatedly vetoing EU negotiations with Ukraine. Can he still win with an election such a heavy handicap? It will be interesting to see on April 3rd

JOSEPH P FORGAS, AM, DPhil, Dsc (Oxford),  FRSNSW, FASSA
Scientia Professor, Psychology UNSW Sydney 2052

P.S. I must also confess to a personal aspect, as I was born in communist Hungary, escaped and became a political refugee at the age of 22, and perhaps not surprisingly, have been following the country’s ups and downs ever since then.

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Don Kichote
Don Kichote
March 8, 2022 12:16

MZP said somewhere ? that the rural population is stupid, they can not even solve a crossword puzzle. That is the reason why here in the rural area all are for Fidesz … so told my neighbor who was on Saturday at a pensioners meeting that takes place once a year and where the pensioners get a meal and a few forints. I don’t know if this is propaganda. MZP has raised something that has its justification but it would not be a good tactic to get elected. There are truths that should not be said out loud, for the loud parts there are enough arguments.

In our country they are building a tarred road with electricity in the vineyard 😀 of course paid by Fidesz. The main road is a patchwork with potholes. Here all think they are highly intelligent I am not surprised.

István
March 8, 2022 12:55
Reply to  Don Kichote

This quote is reported about in several, often very short, versions. The most complete is I know is: “If FIDESZ gathers its best party members of a rural town, they probably wouldn’t be able to solve a crossword puzzle together“ (ha egy vidéki városban a FIDESZ összegyűjti a legjobb pártembereit, akkor valószínűleg egy keresztrejtvényt nem tudnának megfejteni.)

No, it is strategically not wise to say that. But that FIDESZ is relying on the dumbest is true. Again it is about the FIDESZ party members in small towns, not about the entire rural population.

Don Kichote
Don Kichote
March 8, 2022 14:21
Reply to  István

„But that FIDESZ is relying on the dumbest is true.“ 😀 Oh forgive my arrogance but the Fidesz I know are the dumbest here an increase I hardly think it is possible. Not to be so seems difficult too when MZP joins it loudly.

tappanch
tappanch
March 8, 2022 12:18

UNHCR:
The number of Ukrainian refugees has exceeded two million.

Ukraine, 2022-03-07 [*2022-03-08, 2022-03-06**]

Poland:   1,204,403*
Hungary:    191,348
Slovakia:   140,745
Russia:       99,300*
Moldova:    82,762**
Romania:    82,062**
Belarus:      453*
other (which ??) European countries: 210,239

Total 2,011,312

other refugees that arrived in Europe in 2022:

Spain 7,430, including 5604 in the Canaries)
Italy 5,387
Grece 806
Cyprus 261

tappanch
tappanch
March 8, 2022 12:22
Reply to  tappanch

New Ukrainian refugees:

March 5: 193,115
March 6: 208,938
March 7: 201,801

tappanch
tappanch
March 8, 2022 12:28
Reply to  tappanch

UNHCR contradicts itself:

“as of 6 March 2022 00:00 CET

Moldova: 235,000 (including Ukrainians and 28,000 non-Ukrainians from Ukraine)
Romania: 123,000”

tappanch
tappanch
March 8, 2022 12:56
Reply to  tappanch

Military situation as of March 7, 10 PM Ukrainian time:

comment image

“Russian forces are concentrating in the eastern, northwestern, and western outskirts of Kyiv for an assault on the capital in the coming 24-96 hours. The Russians are bringing up supplies and reinforcements as well as conducting artillery, air, and missile attacks to weaken defenses and intimidate defenders in advance of such an assault. “

https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/russian-offensive-campaign-assessment-march-7

Istvan (Chicago)
Istvan (Chicago)
March 8, 2022 14:47
Reply to  tappanch

To understand what the Russians are doing now reading a 2016 US Army report is useful https://info.publicintelligence.net/AWG-RussianNewWarfareHandbook.pdf is now unclassified and can be downloaded. It is a version of the document being used by US forces currently when preparing for combat with the Russians. In turn a version of it was used in the training of the Ukrainian military by US advisers.

While the Russians in the current invasion attempted to use early on very rapid assaults with light armored vehicles traveling at high rates of speed to take out Ukraine’s leadership it failed and led to the death of many Russian SPETsNAZ soldiers who are among the best trained in their military. They are their version of US special forces.

The Russians also used mass helicopter assaults (in one case using 200 attack helicopters at once) with paratroopers that had limited success in capturing several air bases, but can’t work in dense cities. 

Now they have turned to the more traditional tactic of using what the Russians call the God of War, heavy artillery, missiles, and mortars to reduce Ukraine’s urban defenses. This report actually provides some insight into what US advisers may be telling the Ukrainian military to do in response to Russian indirect fire on the cities. Here is one of the passages: “In 1945, during the final Russian assault on Berlin, the Russians expended 1.7 million tons of artillery ammunition against the German front line trenches. The Wehrmacht, however, used intelligence estimates to predict the Russian bombardment and displaced their forces into second and third line defenses. The entire Russian barrage fell on empty trenches, and the Soviets suffered tremendous casualties when the artillery ceased fire and the Germans reoccupied their front line. During the first Chechen war, Chechen rebels denied Russian Forces the use of indirect fires and aircraft by closing to within 200 meter of the Russian lines.”

So if Zelensky if being honest about a fight to the death in Kyiv, then we are likely to see in the days to come some form of assaults on Russian fire support bases located just outside of Kyiv. One reason the Ukrainians want the old MiGs transferred to them is to carry out air attacks on these fire bases. But the Russians will have air defense systems in place too so this will not be simple. At least listening to military analysts it appears that many of the Ukrainian artillery pieces were destroyed by cruise missiles early on so using their own artillery to suppress the Russian fire on Kyiv seems very limited.

I honestly have no idea when the Russians may try to enter into what is called in the military close combat with Ukrainian defenders of Kyiv. I suspect it will be based on how much the Russians believe they have degraded the Ukrainian defenses of Kyiv. Up to now the Russians have not targeted with artillery the Pecherskyi District of Kyiv where the government leaders are likely holding up. There is some discussion in the media that decision was made to avoid in particular the destruction of historic churches there. It would seem the Russians want to force as much of the defensive forces into the city center as possible.

The Russians at that point can begin employing sniper teams en masse. Russia has used this tactic since the Second World War. How long that phase could last is unknown. This all will be pretty horrible for Ukrainian civilians, Ukrainian defenders, and for Russian combat troops.

Istvan (Chicago)
Istvan (Chicago)
March 8, 2022 16:41

Ádám Kolozsi has a good article in Telex today discussing the military situation of Ukraine see https://telex.hu/kulfold/2022/03/08/orosz-ukran-haboru-kedd-elemzes-csiki-varga-tamas . Even though Kolozsi did his graduate studies in Hungarian neo-paganism, not in military science, he did a very credible job looking at the difficult situation the Ukrainians find themselves in. He used security policy expert Tamás Csiki Viki and foreign sources to help with the analysis.

There does seem to be some emphasis in the Hungarian news that the Russians are going to launch a large thrust into Kyiv. But Kolozsi is responsible enough by stating this process could take a while to play itself out meanwhile the Russians can starve out people in Kyiv and continue the bombardment.

tappanch
tappanch
March 8, 2022 18:49
Reply to  tappanch

Military situation at 11 AM Ukrainian time (EST + 7 hours) on March 8, 2022:

comment image

Phil_S_Stine
Phil_S_Stine
March 9, 2022 11:57
Reply to  tappanch

Tappanch, do you know what proportion of the ~190K migrans who escaped to Hungary were ethnic Hungarians?

Istvan (Chicago)
Istvan (Chicago)
March 8, 2022 14:12

I do not agree with the way Forgas referenced critical race theory (CRT) in his essay. It is a rather complex issue here in the USA and has been oversimplified by most conservatives. If one actually reads what has become the preeminent text of CRT, “The 1619 Project” (published by Random House) one discovers a mixture of great and important historical truths about the roots of institutional racism in the USA, mixed with some sections of great historical overreach essentially claiming the driving force of capitalism in the USA was wealth heavily created by enslaved Black people prior to their emancipation. Which many very credible historians of the formative period of US capitalism find to be fundamentally incorrect. The George Floyd moment of racial unrest in the USA was not created by CRT, but CRT became an ideological theory for the Black Lives Matter movement that has largely collapsed in major US cities that are faced with huge crime issues. One reality of this crime wave is that now 25% of adult Africans Americans are now gun owners who are motivated by crime in their communities. About 36% of white adults in the USA report that they are gun owners.

Observer
Observer
March 9, 2022 02:10

Istvan Ch
I share the thoughts of the author – the excesses of PC, identity or victimhood policies are contrary to the ideas of the Enlightenment, and they fracture and undermine western societies. These excesses repulse a lot of people and become rallying points for the wannabe authoritarians, e.g. note the issues taken up by the regimes of Hungary, Poland, Turkey, Russia or the trumpists. In period of crises, and we have been in such for two decades, we have to curtail some of the entitlements/rights and work more for the common purpose, incl. defending the democratic systems more forcefully.

Last edited 2 years ago by Observer
Don Kichote
Don Kichote
March 8, 2022 14:35

I honestly also had problems with the text and therefore stopped reading. “ethno-nationalism” where in Hungary? 😀 are the Fidesz an ethnic group?

Observer
Observer
March 9, 2022 01:56
Reply to  Don Kichote

DK
Like most authoritarian regimes the Orban one is also playing on the Hungarians’ complexes and worse instincts desinged to , pushing the (somewhat incompatible) panels of victimhood on the one hand and the myths of greatness, importance and strengh, eg. “Hu is a strong and proud country”, Orban was brokering peace with Putin, etc.
On the ethnic side they push the myths about the Hu exclusiveness, the inferiority of “migrants”, the decadence and weakness of the westerners, etc.
These are the “ethno-nationalist” narratives sounded every day, which a significant part of the population takes these hook, line and sinker.
Note that the Orban campaign is almost excusively negative, but for the largely meaningless line – “the country is going forward”.

Don Kichote
Don Kichote
March 9, 2022 12:42
Reply to  Observer

“ethno-nationalist” in quotation marks as quasi “similar to” OK. In my opinion, it is pure fascism, which is produced from folk education by the educational institution and the associated propaganda of the regime. I would rather call it a folk nationalism which as a definition in itself represents the hierarchy of different “ethnic groups” like Fidesz and not Fidesz. But well, I understood what you meant, thanks for your explanation.

Istvan (Chicago)
Istvan (Chicago)
March 8, 2022 16:11

Here is a classic Magyar Nemzet attack on MZP https://magyarnemzet.hu/belfold/2022/03/veszelyesek-a-baloldal-orosz-gaz-leallitasara-vonatkozo-kovetelesei In it there is a claim that MZP wants to stop gas imports to Hungary from Russia to punish Russia for the invasion of Ukraine. But the problem for MEDIAWORKS NEWS CENTER which actually authored the article is that MZP never has said this, but reading the article carefully one actually finds the idea of cutting off gas purchases from Russia to Hungary is actually a demand of the “Gyurcsány-Márki-Zay left.” 

No one person is identified in that article as even demanding an immediate end to all Russian gas imports. Hungary’s first elected Black MP, Olivio Kocsis-Cake from the LMP, is cited with a quote that Magyar Nemzet claims calls for a cut off of gas imports but reading it does not indicate that he is calling for Hungary to stop gas imports by its self. The statement was “Russia has the money to go to war by selling energy at a high price. This source must be turned away, closed. […] If this requires sanctions on energy sources, and what Russia has taken, this step must also be taken.” He was I think discussing an EU wide decision which has not happened. 

What is being debated even in the USA is if all Russian natural gas was boycotted how would or could it be replaced? It appears the USA and some EU nations are searching out alternatives to Russian gas and are having a hard time finding a solution. Momentum is also attacked in this article for raising the issue of Russian natural gas exports, but actually is not calling for any immediate import ban. Here in the USA Russian gas really represents about 4% of our supply and there is a movement in Congress to ban all these imports from Russia. The Biden administration is not agreeing with the proposal right now because of the implications of it for EU gas prices and a need to coordinate our sanctions polices. But Magyar Nemzet discusses none of that.

István
March 8, 2022 17:36

I think that it is the same “quote” of Olivio Kocsis-Cake I covered yesterday. The only shut off he mentioned in the sentence shown on M1 was about Putin and money. The context of energy was discussed before cutting the video happened. Whether we are missing half a second or half an hour I don’t know. I would need to watch the entire discussion he took part in to know the details. It is the same as the 4 words closing down public TV MZP definitely said, but in a sentence that aimed on ending the Russian propaganda on public TV, not the institution. Grammatically a full sentence, but definitely not the entire sentence said. The propaganda machine always takes extreme short statements to prove how bad the opposition is, just as the quote Don delivered today. This makes me being suspicious if there are cuts between sentences or just extreme short statements. News falsification is very common in Hungary and even if Kocsis-Cake loudly thought about Russian gas this is no crime, but something I would agree with at once under the only condition that energy supply from other sources would be possible. Exactly the same we have seen with the falsifications concerning the fact that MZP said something about Hungarian soldiers, because he was asked for, the part “yes” is repeated day and night, while the clear condition “but only in the case NATO would decides to send soldiers, what I don’t see at this moment” is left out. Opposition politicians mustn’t do decent comments in regime media, but their words are taken out of the context to show how bad they are. News falsification in Papp-style became the standard in Orbánistan. Nemzet is not the slightest bit better, just with the difference that they may publish opinions as long as the border to slander is not crossed, while MTVA must be independent in reporting by law, one is a privately owned and commercial medium, the other at least according to the law independent and public. In fact they are doing the same dirty job of course.

jan
jan
March 8, 2022 20:44

This article shows how the Viktor gets more and more isolated the longer the war continues.
https://444.hu/2022/03/08/haborus-kovetkezmeny-a-lengyel-kormanyfo-orban-viktor-helyett-a-roman-miniszterelnokkel-van-egy-hullamhosszon
I wonder how he will brag about the Hungarian braveness on the fifteenth.