Political Background
In recent months many Jews and international observers have
noticed a change in the environment in Hungary that is more tolerant of racism
and anti-Semitism. Part of this change is due to entry of the high-profile,
media-savvy, extreme nationalist István Csurka into the Hungarian
Parliament. The government of Viktor Orbán has remained silent in the face
of Csurka's xenophobic, anti-Semitic, anti-Gypsy and racist proclamations.
Just before general elections in May 1998, the Socialist-led government
looked unbeatable. Hungary's then-Prime Minister Gyula Horn, a
Communist-turned-Socialist, had pulled the economy out of the doldrums, pushed
down inflation considerably and won the country invitations to join the EU and
NATO. But the Socialists lost. Few people had felt any benefits from these
spectacular achievements, and austerity measures had hit living standards
hard.
The center-right FIDESZ Hungarian Civic Party capitalized on this
dissatisfaction and defeated the Socialists by a very small margin. With
promises to cut taxes, increase welfare and pensions, crack down on organized
crime and boost economic growth the rhetorically brilliant and charismatic
35-year-old Viktor Orbán became Europe's youngest Prime Minister. Because of
his close win, Orbán had no choice but to link up with the right-wing,
rural-based Smallholders Party and its firebrand leader József Tórgyan and
the small, conservative MDF Hungarian Democratic Forum. The three parties have
a combined 213 seats or 55 percent of the total 386 seats in Parliament. The
main opposition, the ex-Communist Socialist Party, holds 134 seats 35
percent.
December 1999
Next: Istvan Csurka and the MIEP Party
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