EU Legislators Ask Highest Court To Overturn Hungary’s Anti-Pride Law

By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News

BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – A delegation of European Union lawmakers visiting Hungary urged Europe’s top court on Wednesday to suspend a new law banning Budapest Pride, the annual rally for the LGBTQ+ community.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has defended the legislation, saying his rightwing government seeks to “protect children” against “LGBTQ+ activism” while defending “traditional families” and “Christian values.”

Orbán, a close ally of U.S. President Donald J. Trump, also oversaw this week’s amendment of the constitution recognizing only two genders, men and women. This prompted thousands of Hungarians to take to the streets, including in a 24-hour protest that saw demonstrators blocking a key bridge and a rally near Orbán’s office in the Castle District overlooking Budapest.

As protests were underway, the EU legislators criticized a “very hostile atmosphere” for LGBTQ+ people in the country and urged a return to “real democracy.”

Several protesters were detained, including one young protester leader who was pushed to the ground by several police officers, Worthy News witnessed.

Tineke Strik, a Dutch Green politician who led the cross-party group of European Parliamentarians investigating democratic standards in Hungary, said developments were going “rapidly in the wrong direction.”

CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

She added, “We eagerly want this country to turn back into a real democracy because we think that Hungarian citizens should enjoy the same rights and values as we all do in the EU.”

Strik and four other European legislators arrived in Budapest on the day that Hungarian lawmakers passed a constitutional amendment allowing the government to ban LGBTQ+ events.

That change codified a law passed in March banning Pride marches and allowing authorities to use facial recognition technology to track attendees so they could be fined. It has been described by one rights group as a “full-frontal attack” on LGBTQ+ people.

Strik said: “Organisers and participants of the Budapest Pride risk facing criminal charges for marching peacefully in support of diversity, equality, and freedom, as they have done for the last 29 years.”

The visit wrapped up soon after the United States government announced it was lifting sanctions on a close aide to Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, describing the punitive measures as “inconsistent with US foreign policy interests.”

Antal Rogán had been added to the US sanctions list in January, in the final days of Joe Biden’s administration, for alleged corruption. The Hungarian government said at the time it intended to challenge this as soon as Trump took office.

DRINKING CHAMPAGNE

As one of Trump’s biggest supporters, Orban once said he would open several bottles of champagne if Trump were re-elected.

Hungary was the only EU member state to vote against the EU’s retaliatory measures against Trump’s tariffs, which were later suspended after a last-minute policy reversal by the White House.

However, despite his admiration for Trump, Orbán faced an awkward moment when the Trump administration released a report on foreign trade barriers, raising concerns about corruption in Hungary’s public procurement system.

Hungary’s Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó claimed that parts of the report had been “dictated by” the previous U.S. ambassador to Budapest, David Pressman, who doubted the government’s democratic credentials.

Yet the report underscored broader concerns about reported government corruption in Hungary.

Opinion polls show Orbán’s Fidesz party behind the new Tisza party ahead of next year’s elections.

Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.

More Worthy News

Pakistan’s Punjab Bans Child Marriage Under 18 As Killing Of Christian Shopkeeper Raises Concerns
Pakistan’s Punjab Bans Child Marriage Under 18 As Killing Of Christian Shopkeeper Raises Concerns
Monday, February 16, 2026

Christian rights campaigners have welcomed Friday’s landmark decision by Pakistan’s Punjab province to criminalize child marriage by setting 18 as the minimum legal age for marriage. However, the killing of a Pakistani Christian shopkeeper in the same province cast a shadow over the celebrations.

Trump: Board of Peace Nations Pledge $5 Billion, Thousands of Personnel for Gaza Security
Trump: Board of Peace Nations Pledge $5 Billion, Thousands of Personnel for Gaza Security
Sunday, February 15, 2026

U.S. President Donald Trump announced Sunday that countries participating in his Gaza “Board of Peace” have pledged more than $5 billion toward humanitarian relief and reconstruction efforts in the Gaza Strip, along with committing thousands of personnel to support new security arrangements in the enclave.

27 Members of TdA, anti-Tren Members Charged in New York
27 Members of TdA, anti-Tren Members Charged in New York
Sunday, February 15, 2026

An additional 27 members of Venezuelan transnational criminal organizations, Tren de Aragua and its splinter faction, anti-Tren, have been indicted in New York in an ongoing prosecution of groups the Trump administration has designated as foreign terrorist organizations.

‘Muslim Extremists Beat Two Pastors In Eastern Uganda’
‘Muslim Extremists Beat Two Pastors In Eastern Uganda’
Sunday, February 15, 2026

Two pastors in eastern Uganda who were reportedly attacked by a group of Muslim extremists have been discharged from a hospital and are continuing to recover at home, Worthy News learned Sunday.

Transatlantic Unity Tested At Munich Security Conference As Leaders Stress Alliance
Transatlantic Unity Tested At Munich Security Conference As Leaders Stress Alliance
Sunday, February 15, 2026

Western leaders sought to project unity at the 2026 Munich Security Conference despite tensions over U.S. interest in acquiring Greenland, differences on ending the war in Ukraine, and questions surrounding the future of transatlantic cooperation.

U.S. Deploys USS Gerald R. Ford to Middle East as Trump Pressures Iran on Nuclear Deal
U.S. Deploys USS Gerald R. Ford to Middle East as Trump Pressures Iran on Nuclear Deal
Sunday, February 15, 2026

The Pentagon is deploying the Navy’s largest and most advanced aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, to the Middle East as the United States intensifies preparations for potential military action against Iran.

Orbán Says Hungary Should Fear EU More Than Russia Ahead Of Heated Elections
Orbán Says Hungary Should Fear EU More Than Russia Ahead Of Heated Elections
Sunday, February 15, 2026

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said over the weekend that Hungary should fear the European Union more than Russia, pledging to dismantle what he called Brussels’ “oppressive machinery” ahead of heated parliamentary elections in April.