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Country poses new test for Western establishment

Rachel Marsden

Could a Western nation ever be allowed to chart a genuinely independent course without getting side-eyed, nudged and eventually steamrolled by globalist central planners? We’re about to watch this experiment unfold in real time.

Enter Peter Magyar, the 45-year-old new Hungarian prime minister-elect, who just pulled off a landslide against longtime Trump-and-Putin favorite and 16-year mainstay, Viktor Orban. U.S. Vice President JD Vance even flew into Budapest to warn about “foreign interference.”

Vance’s pitch was that the European Union would stop at nothing to push Orban out.

The projection that followed Magyar’s win was akin to dreaming of marriage after the first date. “Europe has always chosen Hungary. A country returns to its European path. The Union grows stronger,” proclaimed unelected European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

Magyar promptly announced a trip to Brussels, cutting straight to the chase. No flirting. Just straight-up gold digging, seeking to unlock Hungary’s frozen EU funds in exchange for rule-of-law reforms. That’s about EUR35 billion. The question is, how much dancing is he going to have to do to get Queen Ursula to toss that cash at him?Because Magyar also says that Hungary should remain strong, independent, and free to diversify — including keeping Russian energy in the mix.

“No one can change geography, Russia and Hungary are here to stay. The government will procure crude oil and gas in the cheapest and safest way possible,” Magyar now says. Not exactly the ideologue they were hoping for.

He has also said that while Orban had been blocking a EUR90 billion tranche of cash “for Ukraine,” which may or may not conveniently circulate through European defense giants, the whole debate is largely academic since Hungary can’t afford to chip in anyway.

So the real question: will Brussels accept Magyar’s rule-of-law tune-up as sufficient to release the funds? Or will the goalposts simply relocate — away from Hungarian sovereignty and toward even greater alignment with a centrally scripted EU agenda drafted by unelected Commission officials and imposed on all Europeans regardless of how they’ve voted?

Indications so far suggest that the EU’s terms for Hungary come with fine print. The Financial Times reports 27 conditions attached by Brussels — including migration policies where Magyar has already drawn a line, referencing a June 1 “end of work permits for non-European migrants. Their arrival will be reduced to zero,” he said in an interview. Magyar has said that he’ll be doing four of those.

There’s also the less advertised possibility that instead of receiving funds, Hungary could actually end up paying. Will Magyar be writing checks to Brussels just to maintain Hungary’s already restrictive asylum stance — currently penalized at roughly a million euros per day after a European court of justice ruling that it violates EU law?

It sounds like Magyar is already limbering up to engage in Orban’s favorite pastime: squabbling with Brussels over money. Unlike, say, Trump or Israel’s Bibi Netanyahu, who enjoy the benefits of EU cash and consideration while straight-up bombing whomever they want as Brussels bites its lip on the rule of law.

Early signals suggest that Magyar may not be especially cooperative with expectations. He has already visited Hungary’s president — who formally appoints the prime minister — posed for a smiling photo, then publicly declared that the same president failed to defend Hungarian institutions and should step down. State TV didn’t fare much better. In his first appearance there in over a year, Magyar accused them of defamation, noted that he had effectively been blacklisted and promised to shut down the “factory of lies” in the interests of media independence.

Was Western concern about Hungary really about rule of law and democratic norms? Or was it just about whether its leadership would reliably align with Brussels, even if it’s to the detriment of Hungarians? Magyar may end up answering that question simply by not being particularly accommodating, except to his own people.

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