Is Hungary’s Present the United States’ Future?: On Zsuzsanna … – lareviewofbooks
ON APRIL 3, 2022, Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbn and his Fidesz-MPP party won two-thirds of the National Assembly seatsa parliamentary supermajorityfor the fourth consecutive time since 2010. In his 12 years in power, Orbn has revised the Hungarian constitution, transformed the state, substantially weakened the prospects for political opposition, and instituted a new quasi-authoritarian regime of national cooperation that he has billed as illiberal democracy or Christian democracy. In the coming years, it can be assumed that Orbn and his government will do their best to further entrench this regime and continue to promote its examplesomething Orbn has heretofore done with great success.
Orbn has been amply rewarded for his efforts. He has accumulated vast political power, which he has used to enrich his family, friends, and principal supporters, thus further reinforcing his kleptocratic rule. He has used his power to reshape electoral law, the media system, and the cultural and educational system; to marginalize critics and opponents; and to intimidate independent civil society institutions, most notoriously through the passage of a Lex CEU that forced Central European University to leave its Budapest home and reopen in Vienna. This has made him the scourge of the European Unionwhose rule of law and transparency requirements he has regularly floutedand the bane of supporters of civil and academic freedom everywhere.
It has also made him a hero of the transnational far right, a symbol of resistance to the supposed tyranny of human rights, gender equality, woke elitism, and liberalism more generally. He has long been lionized by the US populist right: fted at Conservative Political Action Committeemeetings; idolized by Tucker Carlson, Steve Bannon, and Patrick Deneen; and regarded as a pioneer of a new kind of illiberal regime that promises to save civilization from an evil humanistic overclass. In late January, Orbn fanboy Rod Dreher, writing in the misleadingly titled far-right journal The American Conservative, celebrated the political lesson that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has learned from Orbn, namely to take the war against left ideological hegemony to the institutions. And the Claremont Institutes The American Mind ran an adulatory piece by Luke Larsona fellow of the Orbn-funded Mathias Corvinus Collegiumabout Hungary on the Cutting Edge, celebrating how Orbn prefigured Donald Trump, inspired right-wing populism, and now finds himself at the forefront of political change in the West.
Zsuzsanna Szelnyi agrees that Orbns Hungary represents the cutting edge. And it terrifies her. Szelnyi, an author, former politician, and current director of Central European Universitys Budapest-based Leadership Academy, was one of the original core members of Orbns Fidesz party. Working closely with Orbn in opposition to the Communist regime, she participated in the roundtable discussions negotiating the 1989 transition to democracy and served as a Fidesz MP from 1990 to 1994, the period of Hungarys first democratically elected government. She then left the party, along with many other liberals who became increasingly disenchanted with its increasingly opportunistic, nationalistic, and anti-liberal positioning. From 1994 to 1996, Szelnyi worked in the Education Ministry under the coalition government led by the Socialist Party. She then worked for a number of transnational NGOs and European institutions, including the Council of Europe, before returning to Hungarian political life in 2012 as a co-founder of the liberal Together party. She returned to parliament from 2014 to 2018 as a strong opponent of Orbns government, before exiting from electoral politics again in 2018 when Together failed to defeat Orbn and then fell apart.
Szelnyis new book, Tainted Democracy: Viktor Orbn and the Subversion of Hungary (2023), is a powerfully written, insider account of the transformation of Fidesz from a liberal group of Young Democrats opposing authoritarianism to an anti-liberal group of middle-aged opponents of liberal democracy, and of Orbn himself from a charismatic tribune of freedom to a fervent proponent of traditional Christian family values and Magyar Greatness. This transformation provides what Szelnyi calls a detailed twenty-first century autocratic playbook, charting the key elements of the new politics of intolerance.
The core of the book is part two, called Establishing Control. Here, Szelnyi describes in depth the illusion of democracy created by Orbns overhauling of parliament, attacks on judicial independence, and alteration of election law; the ways that Orbn has drawn on EU and IMF funding to establish a Hungarian form of crony capitalism while simultaneously mobilizing his base against the tyranny of these very institutions; the financial and bureaucratic means by which Orbn has attacked the independent press and essentially press-ganged into service almost all of Hungarys media institutions; and his implementation of these institutions to wage a permanent campaign of vilification and intimidation against his political opponents and autonomous civil society institutions. Much of this has been well documented by a range of commentators. But Szelnyi adds important detail to how Orbns autocratic innovations have actually worked, showing how they have frustrated politicians, journalists, legal professionals, and academics seeking to defend liberal democracy.
It is in its nuanced discussion of the political dynamics behind Orbns electoral conquest and exercise of political power that the real importance of this book lies, especially for an American readership. Indeed, the parallels between the rise of Orbnism and the rise of Trumpism are glaring.
When Orbn won his first landslide victory in 2010, he declared that today a revolution has happened at the polls. [] The Hungarians have given their verdict on an era. Like Trump a decade later, Orbn regarded his political opponents as a blight on a prostrate nation, and saw his victory as a political, even metaphysical, triumph of national greatness. Elections, he made clear, are not really about fair partisan competition, actual citizen preferences, and peaceful alternations of power. What followed was a quite deliberate, and often candidly articulated, effort to topple the only recently installed liberal democratic order, and to establish a new regime of what he called national cooperation. Orbn was relentless (Szelnyi recently described him as a Machiavellian genius) in his pursuit of power, his disregard for liberal democratic norms, and his hostility towards political opponents, even when these were former colleagues or friends. Szelnyi quotes Lszl Kvrone of Orbns closest associates and the current Speaker of the National Assemblyoutlining the Fidesz approach to opposition: The greatest political opponent is always the one who is closest to you. Orbn and Kvr are practitioners of a politics in the style of the 1930s revolutionary conservative legal scholar (and Nazi supporter) Carl Schmitt. There are no shades of gray in Orbns political universe; one is either with him or against him. And since he imagines himself to represent the authentic will of the Hungarian nation, to be against him is to be against the nation itself.
Exploiting every opportunity presented by Hungarys distinctive history and post-1989 political system, Orbn and Fidesz have managed to succeed in a way that other far-right leaders and parties in Europe have not, and in a way that the MAGA Republican party has notyet.
But it is worth noting that Orbn and Fidesz are in it for the long haul. Indeed, their electoral defeat in 2002, after having led a coalition government since 1998, can be regarded as the moment when their scorched-earth assault on liberalism kicked into high gear, with Orbn casting doubt on the elections legitimacy, announcing that [t]he nation cannot be in the opposition! In the years that followed, as Szelnyi explains, Orbn and his followers regularly mobilized angry and sometimes violent crowds, who in 2006 attacked the state television building and the parliament building itself: Between 2006 and 2010 Fidesz took politics on to the streets, and its representatives in Parliament regularly obstructed parliamentary proceedings. In short, for Orbn, it was outraged electoral defeat that energized his 2010 comeback and the politics of vengeance that has followed ever since. Does this sound familiar?
While legal and institutional changes have been at the center of Orbns aspirational new regime, lying behind these changes, and powering them, has been the relentless prosecution of a culture war against liberalism. Szelnyi brilliantly analyzes Orbns brazen effort to control Hungarian historical memory. In 2002, in the midst of a heated political campaign, he allocated government funds to create the controversial Budapest House of Terror, directed since its founding by Orbn crony Mria Schmidt. In 2018, he ordered the removal of a statue honoring Imre Nagy, the martyred communist hero of the Hungarian Uprising of 1956 (Orbn first rose to prominence during the 1988 reburial and tribute to Nagy, a demand of the anticommunist opposition), on the 60th anniversary of his execution by the Soviets in power, and the monuments replacement with a Red Terror memorial originally created under the quasi-fascist and antisemitic dictatorship of Admiral Mikls Horthy, who ruled Hungary from 1920 to 1944. Orbns allies have attacked independent historians, and he has funded the creation of new historical institutes, such as the perversely named Veritas Institute, designed to promote a more patriotic understanding of Hungarian history.
Orbn has also waged a relentless assault on what he has called gender ideology, which he claims has overtaken and polluted the Hungarian nation. He has regularly attacked LGBTQ+ rights and womens rights, and his government has sought to purge teaching about these topics from educational institutions, revoking the accreditation of gender studies programs at the two universities in the country that offered them. As a government spokesman explained: The Governments standpoint is that people are born either male or female [] and we do not consider it acceptable for us to talk about socially-constructed genders, rather than biological sexes. Orbns government has thus appointed itself the supreme scientist, educator, and moral custodian of the nation.
Orbn has successfully accomplished what Trump began in the White House and what Governor Ron DeSantis is currently pioneering in the Florida state house, as he surely positions himself for an eventual run for presidenthe has managed to channel widespread public fear and confusion about social change into a vigorous attempt to demonize feminists and trans activists, immigrants, and outsiders of all kinds; to attack all forms of liberalism; and to use control of state institutions to entrench a socially reactionary and politically authoritarian regime. Embraced at last Augusts CPAC meeting in Dallas, Orbn pulled out all the stops, rallying the crowd to fight a culture war against the Woke Globalist Goliath, and declaring frankly that [w]e cannot fight successfully by liberal means because our opponents use liberal institutions, concept, and language to disguise their Marxist and hegemonist plans. Perhaps most ominously, he lashed out at race mixing as a threat to national identity. As Voxs Zack Beauchamp reported:
The purpose of the speech was simple enough: to tighten the bonds linking Orbnism with the Trumpism that dominates the American right. The Hungarian populist sees the potential in that connection. His closing lines called on conservatives across the Atlantic to coordinate our troops in the fight against liberalism, exhorting them to gear up to remove Joe Biden from office (you have two years to get ready). The stakes, in his telling, are the very future of our civilization.
The West is at war with itself. We have seen what kind of future the globalist ruling class has to offer. But we have a different kind of future in mind, Orbn told the crowd. The globalists can all go to hell. I have come to Texas.
In that election, a broad group of opposition parties, ranging from the Socialists to the Greens to the right-wing Jobbik party, came together under the banner of United for Hungary. They agreed to select a common prime minister candidate via a joint primary, to present a single list for all single-member parliamentary seats, and to share a common program that centered on the defense of liberal democracy. The winner of the October 2021 primary, Pter Mrki-Zay, was a former member of Fidesz, a Christian conservative and a center-right small-town mayor who seemed to have broad appeal beyond conventional urban-based and liberal constituencies. (As political analyst Gbor Tka has noted, Mrki-Zay would be a Never Trump Republican in America.)
United for Hungary was the source of much hopefulness for liberal democrats. And yet, it won only 57 seats, nine less than the opposition total in 2018. Meanwhile, Fidesz won 135 seats, a gain of two, while Our Homeland, a new far-right party that split from Jobbik, won seven seats. Orbns far-right, illiberal regime emerged from the election stronger than before. Szelnyi describes this result as disastrous, a dramatic defeat that left the opposition demoralized and confused. And she makes clear that, while opposition unity in 2014 and 2018 had been impaired by partisan rivalries and real ideological differences (for example, liberal parties had been understandably reluctant to coalesce with the historically xenophobic Jobbik party), the oppositions main obstacle in 2022 was simply Orbns overwhelming power. His success during his first three terms as prime ministerin attacking independent media and cultural institutions, tilting the electoral system to his advantage, using budgetary control to reward friends and punish enemies, and propagandizing against liberalismhad enabled him to entrench his party in power and to build a strong base of popular support.
In short, the election seems to signify that Orbn had succeeded in superseding the liberal democratic regime change of 1989 with his own anti-liberal regime change. Szelnyi notes that this regime is not without vulnerabilities. Its corruption undermines its policy effectiveness, putting it in violation of EU regulations, which could bring pressure on the regime (though EU pressure thus far has proven relatively feckless and ineffectual). And the regime lacks support in key cities, especially Budapest, which remains an oasis of liberal democratic power in an expanding desert of illiberalism.
At the same time, Szelnyi closes on a note of pessimism: There will be no easy revival of democracy in Hungary. The years-long entrenchment of illiberalism will pose a serious challenge for any future Hungarian government. Observing that democracy is a difficult and fragile achievement, she concludes that her historically privileged generation, who believed that history always moves forward, have squandered this chance, and that the most we can do now is, with all our strength, help the next generation, so that they can carry on pushing Hungarian democracy forward and manage to overcome the forces of autocracy, which are always ready to pounce.
The forces of bigotry and autocracy have successfully managed to pounce on, and to suffocate, Hungarys fragile liberal democracy, at least for now. The United States has not reached that stageyet. But the Republican Partyin Congress, in state houses across the country, and soon in the 2024 presidential campaignis working hard to follow Orbns autocratic playbook, to wage culture war against liberalism, to Orbnify electoral institutions, and to entrench its own power. Will liberal democrats here be able to keep the forces of autocracy at bay, and to push American democracy forward? That remains to be seen. But what is certain is that we can only succeed if we take seriously the experiences, and the failures, of our compatriots elsewhere. Szelnyis book is an excellent place to start.
Read more here:
Is Hungary's Present the United States' Future?: On Zsuzsanna ... - lareviewofbooks
- The Best and Worst of 2025s Fight for Democracy - Democracy Docket - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- Did 2025 mark the end of British parliamentary democracy as we know it? | Andy Beckett - The Guardian - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- The canary in the democracy mine is local journalism | Vince Bzdek - Colorado Politics - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- When Rituals Break: Why Deepfakes Threaten Democracy Differently in the Global South - Modern Diplomacy - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- USA: Supporting democracy defenders - ARTICLE 19 - Defending freedom of expression and information. - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- Opinion | Democracy is on the ballot in 2026 - The Cap Times - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- A Tribute to Blacklisted Lyricist Yip Harburg: The Man Who Put the Rainbow in The Wizard of Oz - Democracy Now! - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- Is democracy always about truth? Why we may need to loosen our views to heal our divisions - The Conversation - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- Young People Arent Abandoning Democracy Theyre Waiting to Be Invited In - Bucks County Beacon - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- Trump is canceling the rule of law and U.S. democracy - The Japan Times - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- After Bondi Beach: Anti-Semitism is a threat to Australias diverse democracy - America Magazine - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- An Israeli media mainstay is crumbling. Will liberal democracy go with it? - The Forward - December 27th, 2025 [December 27th, 2025]
- DOJ Likely Pulled Photo of Trump from Released Epstein Files - Democracy Docket - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Times letters: Delayed elections and the threat to democracy - The Times - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Local democracy is holding strong, but rural communities are falling behind, new survey of Michigan officials shows - The Conversation - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Republicans Are Fully on Board with Trump's Attack on Mail Voting. But the Beltway Press Won't Say it - Democracy Docket - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Democracy on the Brink - Magnum Photos - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Trumps Hand-Picked Board Adds Trumps Name to John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts - Democracy Now! - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Is democracy the worst form of government apart from all the others? We asked 5 experts - The Conversation - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Meet the Faces of Democracy: Karen Brinson Bell - The Fulcrum - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Jury Convicts Wisconsin Judge of Obstructing ICE In Precedent-Setting Case - Democracy Docket - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Suspect in Brown University Shooting Found Dead as Investigators Link Him to MIT Murder - Democracy Now! - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- After 2025, is there still reason to believe in democracy? Its up to the people. - Atlanta Civic Circle - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Democracy Watch: Candidates in the 2026 midterm elections toe the starting line, ready to race for party nominations - Asheville Watchdog - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- If democracy is at stake, a flawed redistricting effort is not the cure - Baltimore Fishbowl - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- ICC Rejects Israels Bid to Block War Crimes Probe in Gaza - Democracy Now! - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- In Mamdanis Win, New York Has Reclaimed Democracy From Those Who Sold It - Washington Report on Middle East Affairs - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- Another Infant Freezes to Death in Gaza as Israel Continues to Violate Oct. 10 Ceasefire - Democracy Now! - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- The year that could be Democracy and society - ips-journal.eu - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- How the Israel Democracy Institute abandoned both Israel and democracy - JNS.org - December 21st, 2025 [December 21st, 2025]
- John Roberts has badly weakened our democracy. Will he ever stand up to Trump? | Steven Greenhouse - The Guardian - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Rep. Gomez Introduces the Make Housing Affordable and Defend Democracy Act - U.S. Representative Jimmy Gomez (.gov) - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- South Koreas Fractured Democracy: One Year After Martial Law - The Diplomat Asia-Pacific Current Affairs Magazine - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Democracy & Transition with President Bernardo Arvalo of Guatemala - Washington Office on Latin America | WOLA - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- U.S.-Backed Ceasefire Is Cover for Ethnic Cleansing in Gaza & West Bank: Sari Bashi - Democracy Now! - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Maureen Edobor Appears on Law and Democracy Podcast - Washington and Lee University - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Why we shouldn't give up on representative democracy just yet - European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Guarding Democracy from Within: The EUs Struggle Against Internal Democratic Backsliding - Stanford University - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Opinion: The AIPAC Backlash Isnt About Foreign Influence or Democracy - Washington Jewish Week - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- School boards are bastions of democracy, and libraries face funding cuts - WPR - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Democracy in action today with Secretary of State Steve Hobbs, certifying Novembers election results. Thank you to everyone who participated in our... - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Democracy Works: Fixing the information ecosystem starts with us - WPSU - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Cecilia Vicua: Democracy allowed a teenager like me to be free. When that was removed, it was like the end of the world - The Irish Times - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Making Noise in the Cold for Democracy! - HillRag - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- The Five Elections That Will Be Pivotal for Global Politics and Democracy in 2026 - World Politics Review - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- Amazon employees warn company's AI 'will do staggering damage to democracy, our jobs, and the earth - Fortune - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- The EUs Road to Censorship The Democracy Shield - Hungarian Conservative - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- EDITORIAL: Governor should sign bills that support democracy - The Daily Gazette - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- DEM Party urges Ankara to open dialogue channel with Kurdish leaders and allow Ilham Ahmed to attend Istanbul democracy and peace conference -... - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- What Democracy Really Means: Plato and Mill Still Have Something to Say - vocal.media - December 4th, 2025 [December 4th, 2025]
- My guide to populist-proofing your democracy before its too late | Timothy Garton Ash - The Guardian - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Can democracy survive without reading? - WBUR - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- We shouldnt expect democracy to last for ever - The Times - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Rebuilding the Arsenal of Democracy - Hoover Institution - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- The small fights for democracy are the epics of our time - Alabama Reflector - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Celebrating the Inter-American Democratic Charter: Advancing Democracy and Prosperity in the Americas - International IDEA - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Policy Violence: ICE Raids & Shredding of Social Safety Net Are Linked, Says Bishop William Barber - Democracy Now! - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Eugenia Mitchelstein on whether public skepticism of the press could actually be good for democracy. - Columbia Journalism Review - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Democracy Looks Pretty Ordinary And Thats What Makes it Extraordinary - Seed World - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Ending Violence Against Women: Strengthening Democracy Is Part of the Solution - International IDEA - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- This Week in Democracy Week 45: Trump Gets Away With Efforts to Overturn 2020 Election Again - Zeteo - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Stacey Abrams on writing, AI and democracy - Oregon Public Broadcasting - OPB - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- The Epstein Class: Anand Giridharadas on the Elite Network Around the Sexual Predator - Democracy Now! - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- This Week at Democracy Docket: Trumps Texas Gerrymander Blocked, and the GOP Calls ICE on Signature Gatherers - Democracy Docket - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Musings on the state of our democracy - Great Bend Tribune - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Memo to the Secretary of State: In the upcoming Honduran elections, democracy and US interests are at stake - Atlantic Council - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Governments and stakeholders reaffirm environmental democracy as cornerstone for tackling the triple planetary crisis - UNECE - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- The Guardian view on the peers lobbying scandal: Lords reform is a vital step for restoring trust in democracy | Editorial - The Guardian - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- From revolution to democracy - Plymouth Review - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- AI in Journalism and Democracy: Can We Rely on It? - Impakter - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Divided We Fall: Antisemitism and Democracy in Crisis with Moment Institute Fellows - Moment Magazine - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Democracy at the Microphone: A conversation with journalist Lulu Garcia-Navarro - Massachusetts Daily Collegian - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Human Rights and Democracy - Netherlands and you - November 26th, 2025 [November 26th, 2025]
- Democracy Is in Trouble. This Region Is Turning to Its People. - The New York Times - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Americans like democracy, but dont believe it or US institutions are working well, poll finds - AP News - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Democracy in Peril: Chairwoman Salazar Highlights Urgent Threats to Honduras Elections - House.gov - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- This is how democracy should work, hope to see this in India: Shashi Tharoor lauds Trump-Mamdani meet - Deccan Herald - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- The democracy we want, and the one we see - Civic Nebraska - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- How Has War Shaped American Democracy? - American Academy of Arts and Sciences - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Rebuilding Democracy in the Age of Brain Rot - The Fulcrum - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]