Mar 19
Hungary's Anti-LGBTQ+ Pride Ban Sparks Protests
Justin Spike READ TIME: 4 MIN.
Is Orbán Trying to Distract the Electorate?
Hungary's methods resemble tactics by Putin, who in December 2022 expanded Russia's ban on "propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations" from minors to adults, effectively outlawing any public endorsement of LGBTQ+ activities.
Orbán, in power since 2010, faces an unprecedented challenge from a rising opposition party as Hungary's economy struggles to emerge from an inflation and cost of living crisis and an election approaches in 2026.
Tamás Dombos, a project coordinator at Hungarian LGBTQ+ rights group Háttér Society, said that Orbán's assault on minorities was a tactic to distract voters from more important issues facing the country. He said allowing the use of facial recognition software at prohibited demonstrations could be used against other protests the government chooses to deem unlawful.
"It's a very common strategy of authoritarian governments not to talk about the real issues that people are affected by: the inflation, the economy, the terrible condition of education and health care," Dombos said.
Orbán, he continued, "has been here with us for 15 years lying into people's faces, letting the country rot basically, and then coming up with these hate campaigns."