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Over 100,000 rally in Hungary to back government in EU row

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1 of 3. A women holds a placard during a pro-government rally in Budapest, January 21, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Bernadett Szabo

BUDAPEST | Sat Jan 21, 2012 5:52pm EST

BUDAPEST (Reuters) - More than 100,000 people rallied Saturday in a show of support for the embattled Hungarian government, as it prepares to compromise in a bitter row with the European Union to secure a vital loan.

Labeled a "March of Peace" the demonstration was by far the largest rally since the government took power in May 2010, in what analysts said was a reminder that Prime Minister Viktor Orban's Fidesz party remains a potent political force.

Orban's center-right government, accused by Brussels of threatening the independence of the media, judiciary and central bank, backed down earlier this week, aiming to prop up its battered forint currency and keep access to financial markets.

The government has said it will work out details of necessary legal changes by Monday after the European Commission started infringement procedures in the three areas, saying Budapest's new laws failed to comply with EU rules.

Orban is travelling to Brussels Tuesday to try to hammer out a political agreement with EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, in order to be able to start formal talks with the EU and International Monetary Fund about a loan deal.

Amid the diplomatic wrangle and market swings the government has also seen its popular support dwindle and big demonstrations against its policies have become regular.

According to a fresh opinion poll, 84 percent of people think things are going in the wrong direction, although the opposition is fragmented and Fidesz still commands the support of about 1.5 million voters in the country of 10 million.

"Those who are here, many of us also think things are not going in a good direction," Bela Petrik, a 22-year-old economy student from Budapest, said at Budapest's Heroes Square as people gathered for a march to parliament.

"But these mistakes should not lead to speculative attacks that serve the interests of nobody except the speculators."

NO COLONY OF THE WEST

The organizers of the rally, billionaire Gabor Szeles, news magazine editor Andras Bencsik and others said the rally was to show Hungary would not bow to the West.

"We won't be a dominion, we don't want to be a colony," Bencsik told the crowd. "This is our message to those abroad. "The other is we fully support Viktor Orban, and we are proud of what we achieved at the 2010 elections."

Political analyst Zoltan Kiszelly said the size of the crowd was a clear message that Fidesz was by far the strongest political force in the country.

"They have shown the political left that the street does not belong to them," Kiszelly told Reuters. "And they have sent a message to the government's partners abroad to stop trying to tell us what to do, the government is doing fine."

"The way the Italian or the Greek governments were removed will not work in Hungary, and early elections are out of the question with this kind of public support."

Judit Marcsok, a 43-year-old homemaker from Mogyorod, said she was appalled at the tone EU politicians used in their critique of Hungary.

"I was completely enraged when socialist and liberal MEP's screamed this week in Strasbourg, with veins on their necks bulging, at the Hungarian prime minister," she said. "This is no way to negotiate, this is no attitude to any country."

(Reporting by Marton Dunai; editing by Andrew Roche)

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Comments (8)
u9vata wrote:
Not a bad post but it’s not the whole picture because it does not really say anything about the things that made the people go to the streets. A big number of the people went out to the streets because they are with the government generally, but even those who are not like everything our government do was there because we want to show: We will not let any external power change our domestic politics.

Most criticism about Hungary say things like “democracy and media freedom are threatened” but most of the time they who write things like this neither read our new constitution, neither read the media-law, neither their came here and look into our newspapers or at least watch our TV channels. Because if they would do that, it will be cristal clear that the freedom of speech is really granted.
Oh, and last and not least it’s really interesting that the people who claims that we are on the wrong, we are doing things that are not europian, never ever said anything about things like Slovakian laws that deprives the Slovakian citizenship from Slovakian Hungarian speaking people who picked up Hungarian citizenship. I don’t want to preach about this, because the case case I have mentioned is quite complicated to deal with properly but it’s clear that this case is as problematic as ours and no one cares that. Why? The answer is simple: the attacks against the Hungarian government (and against the Hungarian economy) are in real just attacks against the unorthodox politics we started. The worlds economic powers realised that we are “a bad example” that may cause a change how people think about the financial world. We don’t even wanted to ask the IMF any more, we don’t wanted more depts, we don’t wanted the orthodox way of solving our economic problems with austerity and instead of that we already had partial successes with taxing the bank and financial area. On the other hand we seem like a threat even for socialist/liberal parties, just because the two-third victory of a right party makes them afraid (I don’t think that they have to fear from any loss of popularity unless they make the same errors our last government made).

That’s all. It’s just an opinion,my opinion of the things, but many of us share my ideas here.

Greetings from Hungary!

Jan 21, 2012 5:55pm EST  --  Report as abuse
u9vata wrote:
Not a bad post but it’s not the whole picture because it does not really say anything about the things that made the people go to the streets. A big number of the people went out to the streets because they are with the government generally, but even those who are not like everything our government do was there because we want to show: We will not let any external power change our domestic politics.

Most criticism about Hungary say things like “democracy and media freedom are threatened” but most of the time they who write things like this neither read our new constitution, neither read the media-law, neither their came here and look into our newspapers or at least watch our TV channels. Because if they would do that, it will be cristal clear that the freedom of speech is really granted.
Oh, and last and not least it’s really interesting that the people who claims that we are on the wrong, we are doing things that are not europian, never ever said anything about things like Slovakian laws that deprives the Slovakian citizenship from Slovakian Hungarian speaking people who picked up Hungarian citizenship. I don’t want to preach about this, because the case case I have mentioned is quite complicated to deal with properly but it’s clear that this case is as problematic as ours and no one cares that. Why? The answer is simple: the attacks against the Hungarian government (and against the Hungarian economy) are in real just attacks against the unorthodox politics we started. The worlds economic powers realised that we are “a bad example” that may cause a change how people think about the financial world. We don’t even wanted to ask the IMF any more, we don’t wanted more depts, we don’t wanted the orthodox way of solving our economic problems with austerity and instead of that we already had partial successes with taxing the bank and financial area. On the other hand we seem like a threat even for socialist/liberal parties, just because the two-third victory of a right party makes them afraid (I don’t think that they have to fear from any loss of popularity unless they make the same errors our last government made).

That’s all. It’s just an opinion,my opinion of the things, but many of us share my ideas here.

Greetings from Hungary!

Jan 21, 2012 6:08pm EST  --  Report as abuse
Intriped wrote:
Do not continue with the EU Union. They are thief’s and the economically strong countries will install further misery upon your people. The IMF is another gang that should not be dealt with. Another financial solution must be found for Hungary to meet it’s obligations. If not, the gangs of thief’s will have their way with your establishment and it is not a good direction. Current examples are Greece, Portugal ETC.

Jan 21, 2012 8:51pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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