Monica Porter

Is Viktor Orbán really anti-Semitic?

Budapest's Chief Rabbi doesn't think so

Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban (Credit: Getty images)

Much of the criticism directed at Viktor Orbán, Hungary’s long-serving populist prime minister, is richly deserved. Orbán poses as the bête noire of the EU, despite Hungary being a net recipient of EU largesse. Another source of the opprobrium directed against Orbán is his opposition to aiding Ukraine in its existential war against Russia. This is downright indecent for someone who, as a handsome young political firebrand in 1989, helped to end Soviet control of Hungary. Has Orbán forgotten, now that he is grey-haired and rather porky, what it means to yearn for your country’s freedom and independence? Continued access to cheap Russian gas and oil just isn’t a good enough reason to suck up to the despot in the Kremlin.

Orbán’s opponents say that Soros is singled out because he is Jewish. This isn’t the case

But Orbán gets flak for something else, and in that case unjustly: he is not, as has been claimed by his critics, anti-Semitic.

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