Originally formed in 1988 under the name of Alliance of Young Democrats (Fiatal Demokraták Szövetsége) as a centre-left and liberal activist movement that opposed the ruling Marxist–Leninist government. It was registered as a political party in 1990, with Orbán as its leader. It entered the National Assembly following the 1990 parliamentary election. Following the 1998 election, it successfully formed a centre-right government. It adopted nationalism in the early 2000s, but its popularity declined due to corruption scandals. It was in opposition between 2002 and 2010, and in 2006 it formed a coalition with the Christian Democratic People's Party (KDNP).
The party was founded in the spring of 1988[2] and named Fiatal Demokraták Szövetsége(Alliance of Young Democrats) with the acronym FIDESZ. It grew out of an underground liberal student activist movement opposed to the ruling Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party.[3][4] Founding such a movement was semi-illegal at the time, so the founders risked their careers by being involved in the opposition.[5] The membership had an upper age limit of 35 years (this requirement was abolished at the 1993 party congress).[6]
In 1989, Fidesz won the Thorolf Rafto Memorial Prize. The movement was represented at the award ceremony by one of its leaders, Péter Molnár, who later became a Member of Parliament in Hungary.[7]
1990–1998: Centre-left opposition and conservative turn
In the 1990 elections, the party entered the National Assembly after winning about 6% of the vote. They became a small, though quite popular oppositional party. In 1992, Fidesz joined the Liberal International.[8] At the time, it was a moderate liberal centrist party, sometimes also described as social-liberal.[9]
After its disappointing result in the 1994 elections, Fidesz remained an opposition party but grew increasingly conservative.[10][8] In 1995, it changed its name to Hungarian Civic Party (Magyar Polgári Párt) and sought connections to the national-conservative Hungarian Democratic Forum, a former governing party.
1998–2002: First Orbán government
Fidesz gained power for the first time at the 1998 elections, with Viktor Orbán becoming prime minister. Their coalition partners were the smaller Hungarian Democratic Forum and the Independent Smallholders' Party. In 2000, Fidesz terminated its membership in the Liberal International and joined the European People's Party.[8] The government constituted a "relatively conventional European conservative" rule.[4]
2002–2010: Return to opposition
Fidesz narrowly lost the 2002 elections to the Hungarian Socialist Party, garnering 41.07% to the Socialists' 42.05%. Fidesz had 169 members of the National Assembly, out of a total of 386. Immediately after the election, they accused the opponents of electoral fraud.[4] The 2002 Hungarian municipal elections saw again huge Fidesz losses.[citation needed]
In the spring of 2003, Fidesz took its current name, Fidesz – Hungarian Civic Union.[8]
On 1 October 2006, Fidesz won the municipal elections, which counterbalanced the MSZP-led government's power to some extent. Fidesz won 15 of 23 mayoralties in Hungary's largest cities—although its candidate narrowly lost the city of Budapest to a member of the SZDSZ—and majorities in 18 out of 20 regional assemblies.[14][15]
In a closed-door party meeting in 2009, Orbán called for a "central political forcefield" to govern Hungary for up to 20 years to achieve political stability.[4]
In January 2010, László Kövér, head of the party's national board, told reporters the party was aiming at winning a two-thirds majority at the parliamentary elections in April. He noted that Fidesz had a realistic chance to win a landslide. However, this feat was threatened by the rise of the radical nationalist Jobbik party. Kövér said it was a "lamentably negative" tendency, adding that it was rooted in the "disaster government" of the Socialist Party and its former liberal ally Free Democrats.[17]
2010–present: In power
The strong and preeminent Fidesz has benefited from the fragmented and disjointed opposition that has proved inept at mounting a unified challenge to the ruling party in a country where a majority of parliamentary seats are allocated to the party that garners the plurality of votes in a constituency.[18]
Government debt has fallen by 6% in the 8 years after Fidesz took power in 2010 while the country's credit ratings have improved. Economic growth had almost quadrupled with wages rising by over 10% and destitution decreasing by almost 50% (though still considerable). According to official figures, unemployment had fallen by nearly two-thirds. However, as many as almost half of newly employed Hungarians had found work elsewhere in the EU. A public works program has also been criticized by some economists for artificially and deceptively reducing unemployment numbers while engaging in and compensating people for possibly unneeded or unnecessarily inefficient work.[19] Hungary has been highly dependent on EU funds during Fidesz's rule; these representing nearly 4% of the country's GDP, more than for any other EU member.[20]
2010–2014: Second Orbán government
In a landslide victory in the 2010 parliamentary elections, the party won an outright majority in the first round on 11 April, with the Fidesz-KDNP alliance winning 206 seats, including 119 individual seats. In the final result, Fidesz 263 seats, of which 173 are individual seats.[21] Fidesz held 227 of these seats, giving it an outright majority in the National Assembly by itself.[citation needed]
Fidesz was widely seen as propelled to a sweeping victory in large part due to the dissatisfaction with the ruling political establishment which was plagued by corruption scandals and by the 2007–2008 financial crisis.[4] The socialist government had also imposed harsh austerity measures in an attempt to rein in its ballooning budget deficits even before the late 2000s’ crisis. In September 2006, a recording of the prime minister admitting to lying about the country's dire economic prospects was revealed by the media and broadcast on radio. Steel barriers were erected around the parliament to protect it from tens of thousands of protesters.[22]
After winning 53% of the popular vote in the first round of the 2010 parliamentary election, which translated into a supermajority of 68% of parliamentary seats, giving Fidesz sufficient power to revise or replace the constitution, the party embarked on an extraordinary project of passing over 200 laws and drafting and adopting a new constitution—since followed by nearly 2000 amendments.[citation needed]
This supermajority was lost, however, when Tibor Navracsics was appointed to the European Commission. His Veszprém County seat was taken by an independent candidate in a by-election.[35] Another by-election on 12 April 2015 saw the supermajority lose a second seat, also in Veszprém, to a Jobbik candidate.[36]
With the start of 2019, the prime minister's residence was relocated from the Hungarian Parliament Building to the Buda Castle, a former Carmelite monastery and former royal residence. The move was first planned in 2002 during the first Fidesz government, but was never carried out. Government representatives stated the move was necessary to uphold the separation of the executive and legislative branch by physically separating the two (in contrast to the Communist era when the two branches operated in the same building) while the opposition criticized the move as profligate (the renovation cost Ft21bn, or €65.5M) and as a symbolic revival of the Horthy era (Miklós Horthy also took up residence in the building).[42][43]
Fidesz won the 2022 Hungarian parliamentary election and secured a supermajority for the fourth time with 135 seats (of 199) in the legislature. Reuters described it as a "crushing victory".[44] With 54.13% of the popular vote, Fidesz received the highest vote share by any party since Hungary returned to democracy in 1989.[45]
In June 2024 it was revealed that Fidesz had become Google's biggest advertiser in the whole of the European Union.[46]
Orbán and other Fidesz politicians have prominently described their model of government as a Christian illiberal democracy.[100][4][101]
Orbán has described liberal democracy as having undemocratic characteristics because of "being intolerant of alternative views",[100] and being incompatible with and antithetical to Christian democracy (saying: "Christian democracy is, by definition, not liberal: it is, if you like, illiberal."),[4] and praised Turkey, Russia, China, and Singapore as successful examples of illiberal states.[102][103]
Like the Hungarian right in general, Fidesz has been more skeptical of the neoliberal economic policies than the Hungarian left. According to researchers, the elites of the Hungarian left (the Hungarian Socialist Party and the former Alliance of Free Democrats) have been differentiated from the right by being more supportive of the classical liberal economic policies, while the right (especially extreme right) has advocated more economic interventionist policies. In contrast, on issues like church and state and family policies, the liberals show alignment along the traditional left–right spectrum.[104] In the past, Fidesz has implemented several economic liberal policies, including an income flat tax, reductions in the corporate tax rate, restrictions on unemployment benefits, and privatization of state-owned land.[105][106][107]
The Fidesz government has embraced some government schemes, including "public works job program, pension hikes, utility bill cuts, a minimum wage increase and cash gifts for retirees."[108] It has also implemented a national public works program[19] aimed in particular at assisting neglected rural communities.[109] It has sought national control of key economic sectors while assuming a cautious stance on economic globalization.[108]
Fidesz opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq and Hungarian participation in it, questioning the international legitimacy of the invasion.[112]
European Union
Despite the conflict with the European People's Party and European Union (EU) institutions, Fidesz and the Orbán government have claimed to be not in conflict with, but purportedly in line with pan-European values. As he struggled to maintain rapport with the EPP, Orbán began forming a right-wing populist alliance to electorally challenge the conservative EU establishment despite voicing a desire for Fidesz to remain a member.[113][114] Orbán and his government have clashed with the EU over the handling of the 2014–2016 European migrant crisis and the death penalty, which is prohibited by EU rules.[113][115]
Russia and Ukraine
Hungary was the only EU member state to vote against financial aid for Ukraine during its conflict with Russia-sponsored separatists, and has been a vocal critic of EU sanctions against Russia for its actions in Ukraine.[116] The main cause is that since 2017, relations with Ukraine rapidly deteriorated over the issue of the Hungarian minority in Ukraine. Hungary has been obstructing Ukraine's integration efforts in the EU and NATO, even though Hungary has also been continuously helping and supporting Ukraine, with an exceptional attention to Transcarpathia.[117][118][119] Orbán has strongly criticized EU sanctions against Russia but abstained from vetoing them. The Fidesz government joined the UK-led diplomatic offensive after the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal, expelling Russian embassy officials. Orbán has hailed Russia as an exemplary case of illiberal democracy.[120]
During his presidency, Orbán has been described as drawing closer to Russian president Vladimir Putin.[113] The closer relationship between the two leaders and nations has however largely been motivated by a tighter economic relationship,[116][120] part of the government's "Eastern Opening" strategy, announced in 2011.[120]
The Fourth Orbán Government initially strongly condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine, aligning the country with NATO and the European Union on the matter: Orbán announced that Hungary would be sending humanitarian aid to Ukraine, but declined to send military equipment.[121] President János Áder (also a Fidesz member) strongly condemned the Russian invasion, comparing it to the 1956 Soviet invasion of Hungary.[122] However, Fidesz soon realigned with its formerly pro-Russian position: the party repeatedly opposed sanctions against the Russian Federation, prompting international press to describe Orbán as "a key Putin's ally".[123][124] Orbán has called for Russia and the United States to negotiate a diplomatic resolution to the conflict, stating that the Ukrainians could not win the war militarily.[125]
Immigration
Fidesz has adopted anti-immigration stances and rhetoric.[126][127][128][129] The Fidesz government has conversely begun admitting increasing numbers of foreign workers due to a labor shortage resulting from strong economic growth, population decline, and rising wages.[130][131][132]
Nativism
In a 2018 address, Orbán said: "We must state that we do not want to be diverse and do not want to be mixed: we do not want our own color, traditions and national culture to be mixed with those of others. We do not want this. We do not want that at all. We do not want to be a diverse country."[133] Orbán has "often expressed a preference for a racially homogeneous society."[134] The government has modified the country's Constitution to make it illegal to "settle foreign populations in Hungary."[135]
Despite a very low fertility rate that has led to a demographic deficit, the Fidesz government has remained steadfastly opposed to economic immigration that has been harnessed by other European countries to relieve its worker deficits. Instead, the government announced pecuniary incentives (including eliminating taxes for mothers with more than 3 children, and reducing credit payments and easier access to government-subsidized mortgages), and expanding day care and kindergarten access.[136] The Fidesz government's child incentive program also offers a 10-million-forint government-subsidized zero-interest loan to married couples who are willing to have a baby after 1 July 2019.[137]
Social policy
Changes passed by the Fidesz government have given citizens the right to use arms for self-defense on one's own property.[138] Fidesz has passed legislation criminalising homelessness.[139] Fidesz has opposed proposals supported by Jobbik and LMP to require nightclubs in Budapest to close after midnight.[140]
Christianity
Orbán has on multiple occasions emphasized upholding Christian values as central to his government,[141][142][143][144] and has described his government as creating a Christian democracy.[142][100] Hungarian Catholic bishop András Veres described some of Fidesz' policies, such as providing free IVF treatment for couples at state-run clinics, as being at odds with some Christian denominations, particularly the Roman Catholic Church, which opposes IVF.[145] Orbán is a member of the Reformed Church in Hungary.[146] However, the party has been described as taking a more secular position on abortion, the role of the church and education than its ally, the Christian Democratic People's Party.[147]
Family policy
Fidesz is opposed to an abortion ban, instead preferring to promote natalism.[148] However, the Fidesz government has introduced a requirement for women seeking abortions to listen to a pulse generated by the ultrasound monitor before making their decision.[149]
The Fidesz government has introduced loan subsidies for married couples that have three or more children[150] and a personal income tax exemption for women that have four or more children.[151]
Other
Anti-communism
The party is anti-communist.[152] In May 2018, the President of the European CommissionJean-Claude Juncker attended and spoke at a celebration of the deceased Karl Marx's 200th birthday, where he defended Marx's legacy. In response, MEPs from Fidesz wrote: "Marxist ideology led to the death of tens of millions and ruined the lives of hundreds of millions. The celebration of its founder is a mockery of their memory."[152]
The Fidesz government spokesman Zoltán Kovács justified the government's controversial policies as an effort to "get rid of the remnants of communism that are still with us, not only in terms of institutions but in terms of mentality."[139]
During the party's rule, statues of communists regarded as traitors have been removed with Fidesz politicians in attendance. In December 2018, Hungarian authorities removed a statue of Imre Nagy for renovation. Nagy was a Hungarian reformist communist politician who led the failed anti-Soviet 1956 Hungarian Revolution and was later executed for his role in the uprising; the statue was replaced with a memorial dedicated to the victims of the short-lived 1919 Hungarian Soviet Republic.[153]
National Consultations and political informational campaigns
The government has often propagated Fidesz's political ideas in tax-funded advertisements, putting up posters portraying a grinning George Soros, while calling on the citizens to oppose his purported support of illegal immigration (many of the posters portraying Soros, who is Jewish, were defaced with antisemitic graffiti),[154][155] posters depicting Soros and European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker laughing together with text suggesting Soros' control of EU institutions (while also disseminating the accusation by letters sent to all Hungarian citizens),[156][157][158] and posters using the stock photo featuring photo models from the "distracted boyfriend" internet meme to promote family values.[159][160] Additionally, various party members have been accused of antisemitism.[161][162]
The government has employed so-called National Consultations, sending questionnaires to citizens that survey their opinions on government policy and legislation while pushing the Fidesz governments' ideology and agenda with suggestive questions (e.g. by referring to a supposed "Soros plan" to "convince Brussels to resettle at least one million immigrants from Africa and the Middle East annually on the territory of the European Union, including Hungary", that this "is part of the Soros plan to launch political attacks on countries objecting to immigration and impose strict penalties on them", and asking citizens whether they agree, or blasting "Brussels bureaucrats" in a consultation about family policy).[155][163][164][165][109] On other occasions, such as just prior to elections, the government sent letters notifying citizens that it will reduce their gas payments by €38, or sent pensioners gift vouchers.[108] The Fidesz government has also carried out taxpayer-funded "information campaigns", or "national messaging initiatives", that have denounced supposed enemies of Hungary with budgets of tens of millions of euros per year.[166]
In December 2021, the party participated in the Warsaw summit with Law and Justice, the Estonian Conservative People's Party, the Finns Party, the Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party, Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania – Christian Families Alliance, the Freedom Party of Austria, Vox, National Rally, Vlaams Belang and the Dutch JA21, signing a document outlining new collaboration at the EU level between the parties.[183][184]
In January 2022, the party participated in the Madrid summit, hosted by Vox, alongside National Rally, Law and Justice, Vlaams Belang, JA21, the Estonian Conservative People's Party, the Freedom Party of Austria, VMRO - Bulgarian National Movement, the Christian Democratic National Peasants' Party and Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania – Christian Families Alliance, signing a joint declaration on policies towards the EU and Russia.[185][186]
In November 2022, Fidesz MEPs signed a cooperation agreement with MEPs from Sovereign Poland, Vox, Lega, the Freedom Party of Austria and the National Rally to collaborate within the European Parliament.[187]
Orbán has more recently cultivated close ties between Fidesz and the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ), noting "strategic cooperation" between the parties and "friendly ties based on mutual confidence and Christian-conservative values".[192]
Prior to the 2019 Austrian legislative election, he held a joint press conference with FPÖ leader Norbert Hofer, where he wished the party success in the upcoming election and stressed the "similar views" of the two parties.[193]
However, in 2021, Fidesz opened relations with National Rally, congratulating Le Pen on her re-election as the party's leader.[204] Orbán subsequently hosted Le Pen during her October 2021 visit to Budapest and had discussions with her regarding a formal alliance between the parties.[205] Orbán released a video of support for Le Pen during the 2022 French presidential election, which was aired at one of her campaign rallies.[206]
Orbán also has relations with Reconquête leader Éric Zemmour, hosting him in Budapest in September 2021.[207]
Orbán has praised the tenure of former Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, the leader of the League, declaring him an "ally and our fellow combatant in the fight for the preservation of European Christian heritage and the tackling of migration" after Salvini's departure from the Italian government in August 2019.[209]
Orbán previously urged closer political ties between the EPP and the League,[210] and cooperated extensively on immigration with Salvini, describing Salvini as "my hero".[211]
Orbán has also fostered close political ties with right-wing Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization – Democratic Party for Macedonian National Unity (VMRO-DPMNE) politician and former PMNikola Gruevski. While awaiting a ruling on an appeal to a corruption conviction in early 2019, Gruevski fled to Hungary to evade a looming jail sentence. The whereabouts of Gruevski were revealed only 4 days after he failed to report to serve his prison sentence. Macedonian officials have suggested that Gruevski (for whom an international arrest warrant had been issued) was in contact with Hungarian officials in the days preceding his flight, and Macedonian authorities have launched an investigation into whether Gruevski was transported across the border in a Hungarian diplomatic vehicle. The Hungarian government denied accusations of impropriety.[214]
Hungarian businesspeople close to Orbán that had previously invested into Slovenian right-wing media also entered into ownership of Macedonian right-wing media companies, propping up outlets friendly to Gruevski and his party.[214] In May 2023, Orbán pledged that Fidesz would assist VMRO-DPMNE in "various policy areas" ahead of the 2024 Macedonian parliamentary election.[215]
Poland
Prior to the 2019 European Parliament election, Fidesz announced it would discuss an alliance with Poland's Law and Justice (PiS) party if it leaves the EPP.[216] The two nations' conservative governments have shared a close friendship and alliance for multiple years and the Polish government has pledged political support for Hungary within the EU.[217][218][219][220]
Orbán and PiS leader Jarosław Kaczyński have vowed to wage a "cultural counter-revolution" within the EU together,[221] with the Polish government seeing Hungary under Fidesz as a model for Poland.[222]
The relationship between Fidesz and PiS deteriorated following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, after the two parties took different stances on the conflict.[223] The relationship was later repaired after PiS lost power in Poland, with Mateusz Morawiecki inviting Fidesz to join the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group in the European Parliament in February 2024.[224]
Although PiS initially negotiated with Fidesz's Patriots for Europe group in June 2024, it later chose to remain in the ECR after disagreements over the ECR leadership were resolved.[225]
Fidesz also developed ties with PiS's junior coalition partner, Zbigniew Ziobro's Sovereign Poland party, particularly during the time period when relations with PiS were tense.[226]
Serbia
Orbán has a warm relationship with Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić and his Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), with the Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó campaigning for Vučić before the 2017 Serbian presidential election.[227] Companies close to the Orbán government have won public contracts with the Serbian government.[228] The Serbian government has also been accused of taking a similar approach to the Hungarian government towards the media.[229]
In May 2023, Szijjártó once again addressed an SNS rally in support of President Vučić, ahead of the 2023 Serbian parliamentary election.[230][231] Fidesz has also participated in conferences hosted by one of the SNS's junior coalition partners, the Serbian People's Party (SNP),[232] and included the SNP in a working lunch of Fidesz-allied right-wing parties hosted by Orbán.[233]
Slovenia
Orbán has allied closely with Slovenian PM Janez Janša and the right-wing Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS) he heads, going so far as to campaign for SDS during the 2018 Slovenian parliamentary election. Businesspeople close to Orbán also provided funds to SDS-affiliated media companies that then also used some of the funds to purchase campaign ads on behalf of SDS to circumvent Slovenian campaign finance laws.[234][235][236][237]
After the election, and while SDS was struggling to secure political support to form a coalition government, Janša again met with Orbán on a private visit to Budapest; during the meeting, Orbán also conducted a conference call with former US president Donald Trump with Janša joining in.[238] SDS's unconditional backing of Fidesz within the EPP was reportedly pivotal in preventing Fidesz's expulsion from EPP, resulting in a more lenient suspension.[239] In a letter to EPP leader, Janša warned of an "inevitable" split in the EPP if the vote to expel Fidesz were to take place.[240]
Despite its close links, in 2024 when Orbán formed the Patriots for Europe, a new EU political group. The SDS, which has four MEPs, ultimately remained part of the EPP Group, while noting that not all SDS MEPs agreed with this decision.[241][242]
Fidesz provided campaign advisers to Robert Fico's Smer party ahead of the 2023 Slovak parliamentary election.[243] Prior to the election, Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó held a joint press conference with Fico.[244] However, Smer declined to join Fidesz's Patriots for Europe group in 2024, citing an ideological divide with the right-wing parties involved.[245] In November 2024, Orbán gave a video address to a Smer party conference.[246]
In 2020, Hungarian officials from the Fidesz government suggested it was in their interest that the Slovak National Party win seats during the 2020 Slovak parliamentary election.[247] Szijjárto also praised the Slovak National Party following a 2022 meeting with its leader, Andrej Danko, stating that "parties standing on national foundations always understand each other well" and emphasising their shared "Christian-conservative values".[248][249]
Danko has close relations with Fidesz politicians,[250] and has advocated for an alliance between the Slovak National Party, Smer, Hlas, Slovak PATRIOT and even Hungarian minority parties in order to form what he described as a "Slovak Fidesz".[251]
As of 2024, the Finns Party rejects cooperation with Fidesz, strongly supporting the exclusion of Fidesz from the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group in the European Parliament.[257] The Sweden Democrats initially ruled out cooperation with Fidesz altogether,[258] but later insisted that Fidesz sign a declaration in support of Ukrainian territorial integrity prior to allowing formal cooperation.[259]
Fidesz refuses cooperation with the Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR), describing it as "anti-Hungarian" and ceasing its attempts to join the ECR after AUR was admitted.[260]
Orbán and his government have also fostered close ties with the Israeli Likud government under Benjamin Netanyahu, with the two heads of government forging a cordial relationship, having known one another for decades. Netanyahu advised Orbán on economic reforms conducted by the Hungarian government in the early 2000s.[277] Netanyahu later extended public political support to Orbán at a time when Orbán was confronting criticism for praising Miklós Horthy, Hungary's former leader, whose government passed anti-Jewish legislation and collaborated with Nazi Germany, and for allegedly employing anti-Semitic tropes in his criticism of George Soros.[278][279][280] The Israeli foreign ministry issued a statement condemning Soros in a show of solidarity with the Orbán government.[281][282] A Likud lawmaker also introduced legislation modeled on Fidesz's "Stop Soros law" in the Israeli Knesset.[283]
Trump has praised Hungary's immigration policies in a discussion with Orbán.[284] The more amiable attitude of the Trump Administration toward the Hungarian government prompted criticism and a protest by 22 Democratic Party lawmakers that called for a more disciplinary policy towards the country's government over what they perceived as a problematic track record.[288]
Steve Bannon, former head of Breitbart News and a former close associate of President Trump who had an integral role in Trump's electoral campaign and administration, has also praised Orbán and announced plans to work with Fidesz in orchestrating the party's electoral campaign for the 2019 European parliament election.[289][290][291][292][4]
Orbán's Political Director, Balázs Orbán, suggested Fidesz has "many things in common" with the Indian Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) following meetings with BJP politicians, including sovereignty, opposing progressivism, and support for peace in the Russo-Ukrainian War.[297]
Fidesz has been accused of exhibiting anti-democratic and authoritarian tendencies while in government. The Fidesz-led government has been accused of severely restricting media freedom, undermining the independence of the courts, subjugating and politicising independent and non-governmental institutions, spying on political opponents, engaging in electoral engineering, and assailing critical NGOs. The Fidesz-led government has been accused of engaging in cronyism and corruption. Fidesz has been accused of antisemitism, and the Fidesz-led government has been accused of passing legislation that violates the rights of queer persons. Due to its controversial actions, Fidesz and its government have come in conflict with the EU on multiple occasions.
^"Sex tapes, scandals in Hungary's local election campaign". abc news. 11 October 2019. Borkai is running for re-election as mayor of the northwestern city of Gyor, representing Orban's right-wing Fidesz party. Another leaked sex video featured an opposition politician, Tamas Wittinghoff, the mayor of a town near Budapest.
^Nordsieck, Wolfram (2018). "Hungary". Parties and Elections in Europe.
^ abcHloušek, Vít; Kopeček, Lubomír (2010). Origin, Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties: East-Central and Western Europe Compared. Ashgate. p. 115.
^Dr Vít Hloušek, Dr Lubomír Kopecek (2013). Origin, Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties: East-Central and Western Europe Compared. Ashgate Publishing. ps. 177.
^Bozóki, András (2015). "Chapter 1: Broken Democracy, Predatory State, and Nationalist Populism". In Krasztev, Péter; Van Til, Jon (eds.). The Hungarian Patient: Social Opposition to an Illiberal Democracy. Central European University Press. p. 21.
^Mudde, Cas (2016). On Extremism and Democracy in Europe. Routledge. p. 46.
^White, Stephen (2013). Developments in Central and East European Politics. Macmillan. p. 35.
^Tiryakian, Edward (2020). New Nationalisms of the Developed West: Toward Explanation. In Hungary, Orbán and his social conservative Fidesz ...
^Bakke, Elisabeth (2011). 20 Years since the Fall of the Berlin Wall: Transitions, State Break-Up and Democratic Politics in Central Europe and Germany. BMV Verlag. p. 257.
^Bodan Todosijević The Hungarian Voter: Left–Right Dimension as a Clue to Policy Preferences in International Political Science Review (2004), Vol 25, No. 4, p. 421
^Ilonszki, Gabriella (2019). "Hungary: From Coalitions to One-Party Dominance". Coalition Governance in Central Eastern Europe. Oxford University Press. p. 227.
^I. Erosion of Rule of Law, Human Rights Protections and Tolerance (2015). The Future of U.S-Hungary Relations. United States: U.S. Government Publishing Office. p. 36.
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The UEFS Futsal European Women's Championships or Eurofutsal[1] was the championship for futsal national teams in Europe. It was first held in 2001 and played every 3 years until 2007, and every 2 years since then. The tournament was organized by the European Union of Futsal. Summaries Year Host Final Third place Winner Score Runner-up Third place Score Fourth place 2001Details Russia Russia league Belarus Ukraine league Italy 2004Details Russia Russia 2–0 Catalonia Ukraine Belgium ...
steak (Daniel Napierski, 2007) Dave Winer, 2010 Sammy's Roumanian Steakhouse was a Romanian-Jewish restaurant in Lower East Side, Manhattan that closed in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City, but will reopen.[1][2] Sammy's was considered something of a NY foodie institution.[3] Sammy's opened in 1975, in a spot occupied previously by another Romanian restaurant on Chrystie Street. [4] Sammy's occupied a basement retail space in the Lower East Sid...
France 3LorraineCaractéristiquesCréation 12 février 1965Disparition 1er janvier 2017 (disparition informelle)Propriétaire France TélévisionsSlogan « Sur France 3, vous êtes au bon endroit »Format d'image 16/9, 576i (SD), 1080i (HD)Langue FrançaisPays FranceStatut Généraliste publique de proximitéSiège social Vandoeuvre-les-NancyAncien nom O.R.T.F. Télé Lorraine-Champagne (1965-1975)FR3 Lorraine Champagne-Ardenne (1975-1992)France 3 Lorraine Champagne-Ardenne (1992-2...
Combats of Spanish soldiers against Japanese samurai pirates in the Philippines 1582 Cagayan battlesDate1582LocationCagayan, Luzon, PhilippinesResult Spanish victoryBelligerents Spanish Empire Spanish Philippines WokouCommanders and leaders Juan Pablo de Carrión Pedro Lucas † Tay Fusa[1]Strength 60 soldiers20 sailors[2]unknown number of native allies and ships1 galleon5 small vessels 1 light vessel[1] 1 junk18 sampans<100 Wako pirates[1]Casualt...
Pour les articles homonymes, voir Le Chat potté. Le Chat Potté Logo du film. Données clés Titre original Puss in Boots Réalisation Chris Miller Scénario Tom Wheeler Musique Henry Jackman Acteurs principaux Antonio BanderasSalma HayekZach Galifianakis Sociétés de production DreamWorks Animation Pays de production États-Unis Genre animation Durée 90 minutes Sortie 2011 Série Shrek Shrek 4 : Il était une fin(2010) Le Chat potté 2 : La Dernière Quête(2022) Pour plus de d...
Railway line in China Wuhan–Xiaogan intercity railwayXiaogandong Railway Station ExteriorOverviewNative name武孝城际铁路汉孝城际铁路StatusOperationalOwner CR WuhanLocale Hubei province: Wuhan, Xiaogan TerminiHankouXiaogandongStations11ServiceTypeHigh-speed railSystem Wuhan Metropolitan Area intercity railway China Railway High-speed Operator(s) CR WuhanRolling stockCRH2ATechnicalLine length61.8 km (38.4 mi)Number of tracks2 (Double-track)Electrification25 kV ...
United States Army general (born 1929) Arthur E. Brown Jr.Brown in 1989Birth nameArthur Edmon Brown Jr.Born (1929-11-21) November 21, 1929 (age 94)Manila, PhilippinesAllegianceUnited StatesService/branchUnited States ArmyYears of service1953–1989RankGeneralCommands heldVice Chief of StaffBattles/warsCold WarVietnam WarAwardsDefense Distinguished Service MedalArmy Distinguished Service Medal (2)Silver StarLegion of Merit (4)Distinguished Flying Cross Arthur Edmon Brown Jr. (born No...
Uniforms worn by the US Coast Guard Photo showing a variety of Coast Guard uniforms. From Left: Service Dress White, Tropical Blue, Service Dress Blue, Winter Dress Blue, Camouflage Utility Uniform, Operational Dress Uniform The Uniforms of the United States Coast Guard include dress uniforms, daily service uniforms, working uniforms, and uniforms for special situations, which have varied throughout the history of the USCG. Historically, Coast Guard uniforms resembled U.S. Navy uniforms, but ...
American singer (born 1978) Julian CasablancasCasablancas in 2022BornJulian Fernando Casablancas (1978-08-23) August 23, 1978 (age 45)New York City, U.S.OccupationsSingersongwritermusicianYears active1998–presentSpouse Juliet Joslin (m. 2005; div. 2019)Children2ParentJohn Casablancas (father)Musical careerGenresIndie rockpost-punk revivalgarage rock revivalnew waveexperimental rockneo-psychedeliaMember ofThe StrokesThe VoidzWebsi...
TJ Cox Terrance John Cox[1] (lahir 18 Juli 1963) adalah seorang politikus, pengusaha, pengembang komunitas dan insinyur Amerika Serikat yang menjadi anggota DPR sejak 2019. Ia adalah anggota Partai Demokrat. Referensi ^ Taub, David (May 30, 2018). Issues Matter, Not Pelosi, as TJ Cox Talks Congressional Run. Fresno, California: GV Wire. Pranala luar Wikimedia Commons memiliki media mengenai TJ Cox. Congressman TJ Cox Diarsipkan 2020-12-24 di Wayback Machine. official U.S. House ...
Übersicht PLM Product-Lifecycle-Management bzw. Produktlebenszyklusmanagement (PLM) ist ein Konzept zur nahtlosen Integration sämtlicher Informationen, die im Verlauf des Lebenszyklus eines Produktes anfallen.[1][2] Das Konzept beruht auf abgestimmten Methoden, Prozessen und Organisationsstrukturen und bedient sich üblicherweise IT-Systemen für die Aufzeichnung und Verwaltung der Daten. PLM entstand aus dem enger definierten Produktdatenmanagement (PDM)[3] und entw...
Scottish Franciscan friar and philosopher (c. 1265/66–1308) Not to be confused with John Scotus Eriugena. BlessedJohn Duns ScotusOFMPortrait by Justus van Gent, c. 1476-1478Bornc. 1265/66Duns, Berwickshire, ScotlandDied8 November 1308(1308-11-08) (aged 41–42)Cologne, Holy Roman EmpireVenerated inCatholic ChurchBeatified20 March 1993, Vatican City by Pope John Paul IIMajor shrineFranciscan Church, Cologne, GermanyFeast8 NovemberAttributesBooks, a vision of the Blessed...
Two or more humans who interact with one another Group structure redirects here. For group structures in business, see Corporate group. Social circle redirects here. For the city in Georgia, see Social Circle, Georgia. Not to be confused with Social club. Individuals in groups are connected to each other by social relationships. Part of a series onSociology History Outline Index Key themes Society Globalization Human behavior Human environmental impact Identity Industrial revolutions 3 / 4 / ...