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Orban is known for his controversial rhetoric such as his criticism of the mixing of European and non-European races. [9] The reference to history in Orbanism can be demonstrated in the way it upholds certain events in Hungarian society such as the Holy Crown or Horthy’s regime and also in the approach of the idea of nation as exclusive.
The Movement has attracted the attention of Prime Minister of Hungary, Viktor Orbán, who spoke positively of the group. [13] In September 2018, then Deputy Prime Minister of Italy, Matteo Salvini, joined Bannon's new Eurosceptic network. [14] The UK Independence Party also stated they would work with the group. [15]
In the tenth European Parliament, the VB announced it would join the Patriots for Europe group, which was founded by Viktor Orban, the leader of the Hungarian Fidesz party. [ 127 ] Outside the EU, it has ties to the Israeli Likud , [ 128 ] the Swiss People's Party , the Serbian People's Party , [ 129 ] South Africa's Freedom Front Plus , [ 130 ...
Documentary filmmakers and industry leaders gathered at this year’s International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam to discuss “independence and resistance in times of repressive populism ...
Viktor Mihály Orbán [1] (Hungarian: [ˈviktor ˈorbaːn] ⓘ; born 31 May 1963) is a Hungarian lawyer and politician who has been Prime Minister of Hungary since 2010, previously holding the office from 1998 to 2002.
Most notable is Viktor Orbán in Hungary, who has explicitly described his Fidesz's ideology as being national conservative in character and whose government is involved in the funding and spread of national conservative institutions across Europe and the United States, such as the Danube Institute, the Mathias Corvinus Collegium, The European ...
One of the foundation's board members announced the Foundation has an "undeniably" right-wing agenda and that one of its goals is to prevent "opposition-minded media outlets" from regaining "the prominent market position that they held before Mr. Orban's election". [8] Viktor Orbán argued that in Hungary still the "leftist, liberal media ...
Linguist Ruth Wodak has stated that the populist parties rising across Europe do so for different reasons in different countries. In an article published in March 2014, she divided these political parties into four groups: "parties [which] gain support via an ambivalent relationship with fascist and Nazi pasts" (in, e.g., Austria, Hungary, Italy, Romania, and France), parties which "focus ...