Hungary’s Backward Slide

2011. december 13. 09:38

Hungary is similar to Slovakia under Vladimir Meciar and Poland under the rule of the Kaczynski twins.

2011. december 13. 09:38
Charles Gati
New York Times

„After its decisive victory at the polls in mid-2010, the party seemed on top of the world. The 52.7 percent of the vote it received translated into a two-thirds majority in Parliament. Orban has since turned Hungarian politics and economics upside down. Appealing to age-old nationalist suspicions, government propaganda has come to compare Western banks to Soviet tanks and Brussels to Moscow, while rather lame and much too infrequent criticism from Washington or Berlin is angrily rejected as interference in domestic affairs.

Official Hungary is imagined to be an island surrounded by foreign enemies. Orban, though heading a country that is a member of both the E.U. and NATO, keeps assuring domestic audiences that the West is in terminal decline.

The new basic law, or constitution, entering into force Jan. 1 draws on a golden age of Hungarian history that never was, echoing the professed values of the old Kingdom of Hungary. More dangerously, Parliament has curtailed the power of the Constitutional Court while it has created several councils that could override Parliament in case the current government loses its majority; members of these councils are to serve nine-year terms. The new media law is not only restrictive; it has also reawakened the old self-censorship that helps reporters and editors stay employed and news outlets stay in business.

With no checks and balances left in the new basic law, Hungary is no longer a Western-style democracy. It is an illiberal or managed democracy in the sense that all important decisions are made by Orban. Hungary is similar to Slovakia under Vladimir Meciar and Poland under the rule of the Kaczynski twins.”

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Összesen 13 komment

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Sorrend:
novara
2011. december 17. 15:54
Charles Gati,who is still not living in Hungary,is just a professional fearer. Whatever the present government is doing,is highly criticized by him,instead of the last,former communists government. He is jelaous about,that the people of Hungary want no more foreign supported governors,highly not communists,either forced onto them by financial or weaponery ways.
adambum
2011. december 16. 00:28
Too bad people like Gáti weren't nearly as critical under 8 years of post-communist destruction. For a long time, I kind of had the feeling that Hungary didn't exist any longer. Now it turns out that Hungary still exists. Thank Goodness for that!
Senye Péter
2011. december 14. 10:35
Ezzel az erővel és megalapozottabban mondhatnánk, hogy Amerika egyre jobban hasonlít a Brezsnyev éra poshadó Szovjetuniójára.
ciseaux
2011. december 13. 18:23
Gati is a very lucky fellow in deed. He can teach whatever he's paid for by whomever, welcome the previous Hungarian PM (Bajnai) at his university as student-lecturer something (who is a major player in Hungary's economic demise and foreign debt misery), and write articles in the NYT. Well, does anybody gives a rat's ass what the NYT prints? Gati is an expat ex-kommunist-now liberal Jew, gained credibility by the same characters and publications he chose to serve and represent. I rest my case.
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