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Hungary: The tide goes out | Collector
Hungary: The tide goes out
The Korea Times

Hungary: The tide goes out

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk sent a message congratulating Hungary’s newly elected prime minister, Peter Magyar, for having evicted long-serving populist leader Viktor Orban (also known as “The Viktator”) from power. All the usual welcoming words, but Tusk’s message ended with two slightly mysterious words in Hungarian: “Ruszkik Haza” — “Russians Go Home.” There are no Russians in Hungary, apart from occasional visitors, so what was that about? It dates back to 1989, when Orban, then a youthful student leader, became an overnight national hero by giving a speech telling the Russians to end their 45-year-old military occupation and go home. They did go home then, but their influence returned with Orban’s return as prime minister. He had previously occupied the office as a conventional conservative in 1998-2002, but he practically invented modern populism — “illiberalism,” as he called it — for his comeback in 2010. And this time, the Russians were with him all the way. Hungary’s value to Moscow was its membership in the European Union and NATO, which en

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