EU will continue to block €19.2 billion in funds for Hungary

Hungary's funds could remain frozen for years to come unless there is a change in the power balance

Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orbán addresses a media conference at the end of an EU summit at the Puskas Arena in Budapest, Friday, Nov. 8, 2024. (AP Photo/Denes Erdos)
By Remix News Staff
3 Min Read

In a new report from EU Observer entitled, “Billions of EU funds to remain frozen as Hungary fails to reform,” top EU officials stated that Hungary will continue to be blocked from the €19.2 billion in EU funds owed to the country.

The outgoing European Commissioner for Justice, Didier Reynders, while speaking to the outlet, confirmed that Hungary’s funds will remain frozen. He stated that concerns about Hungary still exist because the draft texts submitted by Budapest do not address what he vaguely refers to as “conflicts of interest.”

“The current state of play of relevant developments in Hungary demonstrate that important concerns still persist,” he said.

The EU Observer report also notes that the Child Protection Act from Hungary is a factor in blocking funds. The act stops LGBT topics from being taught in public schools and blocks gender reassignment surgeries to safeguard children.

The outlet notes that on Tuesday, “a hearing at the Court of Justice in Luxembourg saw 16 member states and the European Commission confront Hungary over its anti-LGBTQ law.”

“This is a frontal and serious attack on the rule of law, and more generally on European society,” a lawyer representing the European Commission told the court, according to AFP.

As European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen outlined in a speech in January of this year, Hungary’s €20 billion would remain frozen until the country open its borders. It was one of the clearest references to the fact that Hungary’s strict border policy, which is now increasingly mainstream in Europe, is one of the soul reasons behind the frozen money. However, other issues such as LGBT also remain at the top of the agenda for the EU.

Once the government in Poland was changed and the left-liberal Donald Tusk became prime minister, the country’s money was quickly unfrozen. The EU is now wielding EU funds as a powerful tool to attack governments Brussels deems to be political enemies.

Von der Leyen stated once Tusk came to power, that she was “impressed” by his efforts to “restore the rule of law.”

Tusk has taken over public television stations in violation of Polish law, imprisoned political opponents, and completely ignored court orders.

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