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The 2024 Hungarian Presidency of the Council of the European Union is the third in a trio of rotating Presidency of the Council of the European Union positions currently held by Hungary. Hungary's Presidency of the Council in 2024 is the final nation in the twelfth trio of Council Presidencies together with Spain and Belgium , which began on 1 ...
January 1 – After midnight, Péter Magyar holds a New Year's speech in which he calls for early elections. [1] There is no presidential speech from Tamás Sulyok. Land crossings on the Hungary–Romania border open, as Romania joins the Schengen Area [2]
1 July – Hungary takes over the Presidency of the Council of the European Union; 2 July – Viktor Orbán visits Kyiv for the first time since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, proposing a ceasefire plan which is rejected by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. [62] 5 July: Viktor Orbán meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin in ...
Hungary's nationalist government launches its presidency of the European Union on Monday with a Trump-like call to "Make Europe Great Again" after EU lawmakers questioned whether it should be ...
During a press conference, President Vjosa Osmani clarified that she had no planned meeting with the President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, despite both being present at the event. She emphasized that the dialogue between Kosovo and Serbia takes place in Brussels under the mediation of the European Union and that discussions on implementing ...
“Make Europe Great Again” is Hungary’s official motto for its upcoming turn at the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union. The country announced the motto and a new logo in ...
Hungary's parliament on Monday elected a new president after its previous head of state resigned in a scandal over a pardon she granted to an accomplice in a child sexual abuse case. Lawmakers in ...
13 April – Government of Hungary announces its withdrawal from the International Investment Bank. 24 April – Thousands protest against new education law. [12] A part of the crowd marches to the Carmelite Monastery. Police uses tear gas once. [13] 28 April – György Budaházy is given a Pardon by Hungarian president Katalin Novák. [14] [15]