EU Rushes To Prevent Russia-style Crackdown In Hungary

By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News

BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – Legislators of the European Union prepared for an urgent debate on Hungary’s proposed new transparency law that they fear will lead to a Russia-style crackdown on critics by the “increasingly authoritarian” Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.

The European Parliament’s plenary session in Brussels on Wednesday comes after Orbán threatened to “spring clean” the “insects,” including independent media and non-governmental organizations.

Parliament’s rapporteur for Hungary, legislator Tineke Strik of the Dutch Greens, confirmed, “At the opening of the agenda (of the plenary session) I will ask for a plenary debate.”

She added that she was “very confident that we will have a majority and so we will probably have a debate [Wednesday] at the end of the afternoon,” Strik told Euronews.

Tens of thousands of people protested over the weekend against Orbán’s so-called “transparency law,” which seeks to restrict foreign-funded media and rights groups.

And on Tuesday, over 80 editors from leading European news outlets signed a petition demanding the scrapping of the legislation

Critics explained that the “transparency law” is part of efforts to stifle criticism of the government and seems based on similar “foreign agent” legislation in Russia.

POPULIST LEADERS

The media petition’s signatories said the survival of a free press was both a domestic Hungarian and a European-wide issue, “especially in a region where an increasing number of populist leaders are adopting Viktor Orban’s methods.”

The petition was signed by 84 leading editors from newspapers, including The Guardian in Britain, Liberation in France, and Gazeta Wyborcza in Poland, to broadcasters ORF in Austria and other Central and Eastern European outlets.

They urged their respective governments and European Union institutions to work to prevent the law’s passage, saying it contradicted both EU treaties and the Charter of Fundamental Rights.

Hungarian lawmakers planned to debate the bill on Tuesday and vote on it in mid-June.

Approval is likely as Fidesz commands an absolute majority in parliament.

The legislation comes as Orbán, who has been ruling Hungary since 2010, prepares for difficult parliamentary elections next year.

Orbán faces an unprecedented challenge from Péter Magyar, whose Tisza party, named after Hungary’s second-largest river, is leading in opinion polls.

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

More Worthy News

Israel Expands Strikes on Hezbollah as Netanyahu Vows to ‘Intensify the Blows’
Israel Expands Strikes on Hezbollah as Netanyahu Vows to ‘Intensify the Blows’
Monday, May 25, 2026

Israel expanded its military campaign against Hezbollah on Monday, striking more than 70 targets across Lebanon as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to increase pressure on the Iranian-backed terror group following a sharp rise in drone and rocket attacks on northern Israel.

Appeals Court Questions Kansas City Law That Could Force Christian Counselors To Counsel Gay Married Couples
Appeals Court Questions Kansas City Law That Could Force Christian Counselors To Counsel Gay Married Couples
Monday, May 25, 2026

A federal appeals court is weighing whether Kansas City can use its public accommodation ordinance to require Christian counselors to counsel gay married couples despite the counselors’ biblical convictions on marriage and sexuality.

Tens Of Thousands Gather At Dutch Pentecost Event Seeking Spiritual Revival (Worthy News In-Depth) (VIDEO)
Tens Of Thousands Gather At Dutch Pentecost Event Seeking Spiritual Revival (Worthy News In-Depth) (VIDEO)
Monday, May 25, 2026

Tens of thousands of evangelical Christians gathered in the Netherlands for one of Europe’s largest multi-day Christian events, with organizers and participants expressing hopes for spiritual revival in the nation and across Europe.

Trump Defends Iran Talks, Says Deal Must Be ‘Great and Meaningful’ or There Will Be ‘No Deal’
Trump Defends Iran Talks, Says Deal Must Be ‘Great and Meaningful’ or There Will Be ‘No Deal’
Monday, May 25, 2026

President Donald Trump pushed back Monday against sharp criticism from Republicans and former administration officials over a potential U.S.-Iran agreement, insisting that any final accord must prevent Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon or it will not be signed.

Trump Presses Muslim Nations to Join Abraham Accords as Part of Iran Deal
Trump Presses Muslim Nations to Join Abraham Accords as Part of Iran Deal
Monday, May 25, 2026

President Donald Trump said Monday that countries involved in negotiations over Iran should be required to join the Abraham Accords, signaling that the White House is seeking to turn a possible Iran agreement into a wider regional realignment that includes normalization with Israel.

Serbia Tensions Remain High After Massive Anti-Government Protests
Serbia Tensions Remain High After Massive Anti-Government Protests
Monday, May 25, 2026

Tensions remained high in Serbia’s capital Belgrade on Sunday after at least tens of thousands of people demanded elections and rallied against what they view as the increasingly authoritarian rule of President Aleksandar Vučić, with violence erupting after the protest and more than 20 people arrested.

Christian Church Leaders Killed In India’s Manipur State Amid Escalating Violence
Christian Church Leaders Killed In India’s Manipur State Amid Escalating Violence
Monday, May 25, 2026

Investigations were ongoing Sunday into the killing of three senior Kuki-Thadou Christian church leaders by unidentified gunmen in India’s northeastern Manipur State, Christian investigators told Worthy News.