Thousands in Hungary demand 'new and fair elections'
after anti-migrant PM's win
Opposition supporters upset Viktor Orban won large majority
with around 50% of vote
The Associated Press
People attend a protest against the government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban in Budapest, Hungary, on Saturday.
(Bernadett Szabo/Reuters)
Tens of thousands of anti-government protesters marched Saturday in the Hungarian capital of Budapest, demanding a new election and a new national electoral system in the biggest opposition rally in years.
Prime Minister Viktor Orban was re-elected for a fourth term last week. His right-wing populist Fidesz party won a supermajority in the national assembly, with preliminary results showing that Fidesz and tiny ally the Christian Democratic party won 134 seats in the 199-seat legislature.
Opposition supporters are upset that Hungary's electoral rules have given Orban's party such a large majority in Parliament when it only won around 50 per cent of the vote.
While the left-wing opposition parties won 12 of 18 seats at stake in Budapest districts, Fidesz won 85 of 88 seats outside the capital. The other 93 seats were allocated based on votes for party lists.
Protesters marched from the Opera to Parliament, shouting "New elections!" "We are the majority!" "Vik-tator!" and "Filthy Fidesz!"
Protesters marched from the Hungarian State Opera, shown above, to Parliament.
(Zsolt Szigetvary/MTI via AP)
The size of the crowd, overflowing from the city's Kossuth Square outside the striking neo-Gothic Parliament, rivalled the pro-government "Peace March" held on March 15. Organizers said another anti-government protest would be held next weekend.
"We want new and fair elections," opposition activist Gergely Gulyas told the huge crowd. "This is the responsibility of the government and we're going to remind them of this, peacefully and massively."
Orban, whose campaign focused on the demonization of migrants, has promised "significant changes" in his next government, which could push for a constitutional amendment against migration.
A fragmented opposition, a complex electoral system that disproportionately favours the biggest party and Orban's decision to greatly facilitate citizenship for Hungarians living in neighbouring countries like Romania and Serbia all contributed to his large win on April 8.
'We're not scared'
Over 96 per cent of voters in those bordering countries — including areas that Hungary lost after the First World War — backed Orban's Fidesz party.
"When I asked my grandparents why they allowed [communist dictator] Matyas Rakosi to stay in power for so long, they answered that they were scared," writer and journalist Gergely Homonnay, one of the rally's organizers, told protesters. "Well, I'm not scared. We're not scared."
You should be scared. Not scared of Orban, but scared of the consequences of a left-wing government in Budapest. Allowing Muslims to come 'en masse' into the country would be cultural suicide and would ensure your grand-children will be wearing hijabs in their life-time.
Homonnay said protesters had three requests: Changing the electoral system "which forever cements Fidesz in power;" ousting Chief Prosecutor Peter Polt, an Orban ally, because "as long as he is in office not a single corruption case will be investigated;" and getting Fidesz out of state media, which has become an unabashed promoter of government propaganda in recent years.
Orban claims that opposition parties want to turn Hungary into an "immigrant nation" with the help of the European Union, the United Nations and Hungarian-American billionaire and philanthropist George Soros. Opposition members deny the claim.
And yet, I would bet my shirt that Soros' NGOs in Hungary helped organize this rally. Nevertheless, Orban does need to clean up his party. Corruption voids any moral imperative to rule.
At the end of the rally Saturday, participants sang Hungary's national anthem, as well as the EU anthem, which is based on Ludwig van Beethoven's "Ode to Joy."
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