Monica Porter

How Viktor Orbán plans to ‘Make Europe Great Again’

Hungary's prime minister Viktor Orban (Getty images)

Hungary has just begun its presidency of the Council of the EU, as part of the member states’ six-monthly rotation process. Unsurprisingly, prime minister Viktor Orbán is all keyed up for the challenge. For years the bureaucrats of Brussels have tried to force the stubbornly contrary PM to change his ways, withholding billions of euros as punishment for his administration’s ‘democratic backsliding’. But sticking to his guns, Orbán has declared that, on the contrary, it is he who will ‘take over Brussels’ and change the EU. Hubris indeed. After all, David Cameron with his emollient charms was unable to get the EU to alter its entrenched culture, which ultimately led to Brexit. But with the rise of likeminded populist political leaders in Europe – especially Giorgia Meloni in Italy and Marine Le Pen in France – and the continent’s overall rightwards movement, he feels the wind in his sails. Orbán can afford to be cocky.

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