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Hungary's Orban calls on European anti-refugee politicians to take over EU

Hungary's Prime Minister Victor Oran (File photo)

Hungary’s far-right prime minister has forged new partnership with Italy’s ultra-right interior minister, calling for European “anti-migration politicians” to take over the continent’s institutions in the upcoming elections.

“This is a topic that is radically transforming European politics, it’s the defining political process in Europe,” said Victor Orban during a Thursday news conference with Italy’s populist Interior Minister Matteo Salvini in the capital Budapest. “The party structures, traditionally left or right, are being taken over by a different dimension – those for migration and against immigration.” Orban added.

Salvini earlier said in a presser in the Polish capital Warsaw that he believed Italy and Poland could trigger a “European spring” that would rupture the power of France and Germany in the European Union and offer the block “new blood, new strength, new energy.”

Salvini made the remarks after he met with chief of Poland’s governing Law and Justice party (PiS), Jarosław Kaczynski, who is regarded as the most powerful politician in the country.

“The Warsaw-Rome axis is one of the most wonderful developments of the year so far. I have high hopes for it,” Orban further emphasized on Thursday, setting out a position as Europe’s most staunchly anti-migration statesman in recent years.

The prime minister also described the upcoming elections in May as “destiny-deciding,” saying: “Our goal is that opponents of immigration become a majority in the institutions of the European Union.”

The combative 55-year-old — who has emerged as a self-styled “illiberal” figurehead for nationalist politicians in Europe — hailed Italy’s Salvini as “brave” for his anti-immigration stance.

Italy’s populist Interior Minister Matteo Salvini (photo by AFP)

Hungary aims for anti-immigration majority in Europe institutions

Orban further insisted that Hungary’s goal was to gain an anti-immigration majority in the European parliament, then in the executive European commission, and later -- as national elections change the continent’s political landscape -- the European council, where the continent’s national leaders adopt the most important EU policies.

The Hungarian premier went on to identify French President Emmanuel Macron as the leader of the pro-immigration forces he opposes, adding: “If what he wants with regards to migration materializes in Europe, that would be bad for Hungary, therefore I must fight him.”

In contrast, he described Salvini “a hero in my eyes” for his anti-refugee positions.

Reacting to Orban’s remarks about Salvini, the president of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe group in the European parliament, Guy Verhofstadt, stated in a Twitter post that “the EPP have always said they can control Orban by keeping him inside their tent. Now that he’s promoting a new far-right group, it’s clear he is out of control.”

Pope Francis warns against populist movements

This is while Pope Francis warned earlier in the week against a resurgence of nationalist and populist movements, slamming countries that try to solve the refugee crisis with unilateral or isolationist efforts.

Speaking to diplomats in an annual speech known informally as his “state of the world” address, the pope further implied that such movements and closed-door policies were turning the clock back 100 years to the dangerous period between the world wars.

Relationships within the international community “are experiencing a period of difficulty, with the resurgence of nationalistic tendencies,” he emphasized.

In his hour-long speech, the Pope repeatedly mentioned the League of Nations, which was set up after World War One with the purported aim of promoting peace, but failed to halt the nationalist and populist movements that facilitated the move towards World War Two.

“The reappearance of these impulses today is progressively weakening the multilateral system,” Francis said in his speech before envoys from 183 countries.


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