The EU cannot afford to compromise on the rule-of-law provisions it applies to the funds it allocates...How the EU responds to the challenge to those provisions now posed by Hungary and Poland will determine whether it survives as an open society true to the values upon which it was founded.
Hungary and Poland have vetoed the European Union’s proposed €1.15
trillion ($1.4 trillion) seven-year budget and the €750 billion European
recovery fund. Although the two countries are the budget’s biggest
beneficiaries, their governments are adamantly opposed to the
rule-of-law conditionality that the EU has adopted at the behest of the
European Parliament. They know that they are violating the rule of law
in egregious ways, and do not want to pay the consequences.
It is not so much an abstract concept like
the rule of law that Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and, to a
lesser extent, Poland’s de facto ruler, Jarosław Kaczyński, oppose. For
them, the rule of law represents a practical limit on personal and
political corruption. The veto is a desperate gamble by two serial
violators.It was also an unprecedented step, coming at a moment when
Europe is suffering from a dangerous surge of COVID-19 cases, and it
threw the other EU countries’ representatives into confusion. But when
the shock wore off, closer analysis revealed that there is a way around
the veto.The rule-of-law regulations
have been adopted. In case
there is no agreement on a new budget, the old budget, which expires at
the end of 2020, is extended on a yearly basis. Hungary and Poland
would not receive any payments under this budget, because their
governments are violating the rule of law. Likewise, the recovery fund,
called Next Generation EU, could be implemented by using an enhanced
cooperation procedure, as Guy Verhofstadt has proposed. If the EU went
down this road, the Orbán-Kaczyński veto could be circumvented. The
question is whether the EU, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel perhaps
leading the way, can muster the political will. I am a committed
supporter of the EU as a model of an open society built on the rule of
law. Being of Hungarian Jewish origin, I am particularly concerned with
the situation in Hungary, where I have been active as a philanthropist
for more than 30 years.
Orbán has constructed in Hungary an elaborate kleptocratic system to rob the country blind. The amount by which he has enriched his family and friends is difficult to estimate but many of them have become exceedingly wealthy. Orbán is now using the new wave of COVID-19 to amend the Hungarian Constitution
and the electoral law (once again) and to entrench himself as prime
minister for life by constitutional means. That is a tragedy for the
Hungarian people.
Let me give a few examples of how Orbán has robbed the Hungarian people. He has
transferred vast sums of public money
to a number of private foundations that he indirectly controls. By a
clever constitutional trick, Orbán is now permanently removing these
assets from the public domain; it would take a two-thirds majority of
Parliament to return them to the Hungarian people. The amounts involved
add up to nearly $2.8 billion.
In a series of fraudulent transactions, companies close to Orbán purchased over 16,000 ventilators
on behalf of Hungary for almost $1 billion, far exceeding the number of
intensive care beds and medical personnel that could operate them. An
analysis of international trade data shows that Hungary paid the most in
the EU for ventilators from China, at one point paying over 50 times
more than Germany.One of these companies also secured an order from
Slovenia, whose prime minster, Janez Janša, is a close political ally of
Orbán. The European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) needs to investigate
whether the EU was defrauded.
The recent contract for the Russian vaccine that will make Hungary the first European country to use it deserves to be investigated.At
the same time, Orbán is seeking to avoid accountability for these
actions, and taking steps to prevent a repeat of the local elections in
2019, when his Fidesz party lost control
of the municipal government of Budapest and other major cities. He is
going out of his way to deprive Budapest of financial resources, vetoing the city’s application
to borrow money from the European Investment Bank to buy new mass
transportation equipment amenable to social distancing. Budapest is now
looking at a $290 million shortfall in its budget for 2021. Similar
conditions prevail in other cities with local governments that are not
controlled by Fidesz.Hungary’s opposition parties are bravely trying to
challenge Orbán by forming a common list of candidates for the 2022
general election. But their chances of success are limited because Orbán
can change the rules at short notice, as he has already done several
times before. Conveniently, Orbán is planning to introduce the latest
changes to the electoral law while the pandemic is raging, Budapest is
under curfew, and soldiers are patrolling the streets.
Moreover, Orbán
exercises almost total control over the countryside, where the majority
of the population lives. He controls the information they receive, and
voting in many villages is not secret. There is practically no way the opposition can prevail.
Only
the EU can help. EU funds, for example, should be directed to local
authorities, where there is still a functioning democracy in Hungary,
unlike at the national level.The EU can’t afford to compromise on the
rule-of-law provisions. How it responds to the challenge posed by Orbán
and Kaczyński will determine whether it survives as an open society true
to the values upon which it was founded.
© Project Syndicate
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