He founded in 2006, together with László Toroczkai, the Hunnia organization. This organization rejects both the accession of Hungary to the European Union in 2004 and the Treaty of Trianon, and calls for a Greater Hungary with borders as they were before 1920.[2]
Budaházy was known with his new organization by numerous acts of violence with Molotov cocktails[citation needed]. Budaházy was imprisoned in custody for various militant offenses since 2009.[3][4] Budaházy was pardoned in April 2023 by the Hungarian president, Katalin Novák.[5][6]
Family
In 1997, he married Bernadett Trencsányi, with whom he has three children (born 1999, 2001 and 2006). His younger sister Edda Budaházy is also a well-known right-wing activist.[citation needed]
^Spengler, Frank; Friedrich, Mark Alexander (1 January 2013). "The Far-Right Jobbik Party and the Situation of Political Extremism in Hungary". Security Policy: 89–107. JSTORresrep10118.8.
Egy család évszázadai. A budaházi és veskóczi Budaházy család története. Genealogiai táblázatok az 1260-as évektől napjainkig. Budaházi Családi Alapítvány, Debrecen, 2004, ISBN963-216-123-8