
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – Several thousand Hungarians marched against government measures that they fear will lead to a Russia-style crackdown on LGBTQI marches and other protests, as well as critical media and other groups.
The rally began as several human rights organizations said Budapest police halted an alternative event to the annual Pride parade that authorities had “banned.”
Hungary’s European Union Minister János Bóka told EU leaders Tuesday that “there is no such thing in Hungary as a Pride ban.”
However, Hungary’s rightwing government also made clear it wants to “protect” children against what it views as LGBTQI propaganda and protect “Christian values” and families.
Yet in a statement to the Worthy News Europe Bureau in Budapest, groups Amnesty International Hungary, Háttér Society, Hungarian Helsinki Committee, Rainbow Mission Foundation (Budapest Pride’s foundation), and Hungarian Civil Liberties Union accused Bóka of lying.
They said Budapest police banned an alternative Pride march which was to be held Saturday, June 1, “citing the amendment passed in March that bans demonstrations that display homosexuality or sexual diversity as ‘violating the rights of children.’”
As required by law, “the protest organizers had notified the police of the planned rally on May 24. The reasoning behind the ban was that the demonstration was similar to the ‘previously established Pride schedule and forms of expression,’” the groups said.
TWO GENDERS
“The aim of the demonstration is to speak up against the prevalent trans- and homophobia, to stand up for equal rights for the LGBTQI community, and to draw attention to the fact that the infamous Section 33 outlawed legal gender recognition for trans people five years ago,” the groups added,
Last month, the government used its two-thirds majority in parliament to change the constitution, known as the Fundamental Law in Hungary, to restrict LGBTQI groups from holding public events while recognizing only two genders: “male and female.”
Despite the restrictions, European legislators seek to join the planned but “banned” official Pride march in Budapest on June 28, where protesters face 500 euros ($567) in fines if recognized through special facial recognition systems.
It was not immediately clear if the banned June 1 alternative Pride would go ahead.
Besides concerns about a Pride ban, protesters on Tuesday expressed worries about planned legislation that could ultimately fine and even halt operations of critical non-governmental organizations and independent media funded from abroad if they are seen as a “threat to Hungary’s sovereignty.”
Independent legislator Ákos Hadházy, who has led weekly protests against these developments, warned that the current government “seeks to eliminate public debate” ahead of elections next year. Some smoke bombs were thrown, and slogans were said near the controversial Sovereignty Protection Office in Budapest, with police standing nearby.
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, a close ally of U.S. President Donald J. Trump, also encourages Hungarians to act as informants of people with double nationalities if they are seen as “a threat to Hungary,” including journalists, Worthy News learned.
Orbán has ruled Hungary since 2010 despite Brussels withholding billions in EU funding over corruption and rule-of-law concerns, charges he denies.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel have delivered a trove of documents to Congress detailing donation patterns to the Clinton Foundation from foreign and domestic entities, reigniting scrutiny over whether critical evidence was withheld from federal investigators who sought to examine pay-to-play allegations a decade ago.
A war of words erupted between Turkey and Israel this week as plans advanced for an International Stabilization Force (ISF) in Gaza under President Donald Trump’s U.S.-brokered peace plan — a force intended to oversee the fragile ceasefire, disarm Hamas, and restore stability to the war-torn enclave.
President Donald Trump on Monday issued a stark warning to the U.S. Supreme Court, saying the justices have been given “the wrong numbers” in a pending case that challenges his authority to impose tariffs under emergency powers — a decision he warned could trigger a $3 trillion economic collapse and endanger America’s national security.
After a grueling overnight session stretching into the early hours of Tuesday morning, the House Rules Committee voted 8–4 along party lines to advance a bill aimed at ending the longest government shutdown in U.S. history — now entering its 42nd day. The measure, supported by all Republicans on the panel, moves next to the full House for a vote Wednesday, where GOP leaders are confident it will pass.
French President Emmanuel Macron announced Tuesday that France will assist the Palestinian Authority (PA) in drafting a constitution for a future Palestinian state, following a meeting with PA President Mahmoud Abbas at the Élysée Palace. The move comes as part of France’s broader push to promote a two-state solution after recognizing a Palestinian state at the United Nations in September.
Venezuela has launched a massive two-day military mobilization involving nearly 200,000 troops as the USS Gerald R. Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, arrived in Latin American waters Tuesday, significantly escalating regional military tensions.
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he was “deeply saddened” after a Turkish military cargo plane carrying 20 personnel crashed Tuesday in Georgia, near the border with Azerbaijan, and officials feared there were no survivors.