Hungary Fined for Limiting Asylum Seekers – Is it Time to Break Up with the EU?


Posted originally on Sep 4, 2024 By Martin Armstrong

 

The European Union has fined Hungary for failing to accept its delegated quota of migrants. Hungary has refused to pay the fine €200 million fine issued by the European Court of Justice (ECJ). Will this be the issue that finally breaks ties between Hungary and the European Union?

Hungary is constantly at odds with the elite in Brussels who wish to impose a one-Europe government over all member states. The EU has taken over trade, currency, and domestic law for each member. In June, the ECJ found the nation guilty of “unprecedented and exceptionally serious breach of EU law” for limiting the number of asylum seekers. “That conduct constitutes a serious threat to the unity of EU law, which has an extraordinarily serious impact both on private interests, particularly the interests of asylum seekers, and on the public interest,” the judges said.

HungaryBillboard.EU_.Soros_.VonLeyden

“It seems that illegal migrants are more important to the Brussels bureaucrats than their own European citizens,” Prime Minister Viktor Orbán stated. None of Orban’s policies align with Brussels and the EU has been actively ostracizing Hungary for its independent positions.

The fee has already been claimed as the European Commission plans to deduct the 200 million euros from Hungary’s portion of the European Union budget. Worsening relations, the ECJ is considering placing a 1 million euro DAILY fine on the member nation for ignoring the ruling, in addition to the 200 million it has already claimed.

The European Union is actively destroying Hungary’s economy. The EU has repeatedly sided with Ukraine over the ongoing oil dispute. Orban has been the target of unwarranted hate since he met with both Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin to hold peace talks. EU diplomats and foreign affair officials boycotted  Hungary’s rotation to hold summits and discuss its ideas for the bloc. They claim each state is a member but they are willing to completely ignore and silence member states who do not blindly comply with Brussels.

Orban does not want to fund Ukraine or involve itself in the war against Russia – strike one. “My job is to convince them to shift from the pro-war policy to a pro peace policy,” Orban said. “They believe that they can destroy the military [of the] Russians … but I don’t believe this at all, because I know the Russians, I know the Soviet Union, I know the Ukrainians. I’m belonging to a neighboring country. I know the whole context. It’s impossible to find a solution on the battlefield, we will lose every day thousands of innocent people,” Orban told CNBC, also adding that “human life is the most precious thing we can lose,” citing the thousands who have already died in this endless war.

In addition to this, there are trade tensions between Ukraine and Hungary. Hungary and Slovakia are exempt from the EU ban on Russian crude oil. These landlocked neighbors are to receive oil through the Druzhba pipeline, but Ukraine has prevented these nations from receiving shipments. Lukoil may be the main supplier using this line, but Russneft, Tatneft, and Gazprom also utilize this line, leading Ukraine to intervene. Hungary is blocking aid to Ukraine as a result, but Brussels has repeatedly told Hungary it is in the wrong.

There is no European Union. There is a European authority within the pretend union that controls all members. The United Kingdom was wise to leave the EU when they had the opportunity, as this power-hungry bloc WILL become more tyrannical as the European economy turns down, war turns up, and member states begin to question the entire alliance. One must ask who actually benefits from the European Union’s regulations and absence of protections.

Hungary Ostracized by the European Union


e European Union

Posted originally on Jul 17, 2024 By Martin Armstrong 

Hungary Anti EU

The European Union is far from an actual union. Those at the top in Brussels make the decisions, and everyone is expected to adhere blindly. Viktor Orbán of Hungary has long fallen out of favor with the European Union for opposing the war in Ukraine. August is Hungary’s round to host the next EU summit, but foreign affairs ministers are refusing to attend.

Now, each member state has a chance to hold the presidency of the Council of the EU. August 28-29 was slated to be Hungary’s opportunity to share its ideas for matters like foreign policy with the rest of the bloc. EU Foreign Policy Chief Josep Borrell planned a “formal” council meeting on the exact dates of Hungary’s summit to undermine the country’s voice in the bloc.

Victor Orban Hungary

Two-thirds of foreign ministers chose not to attend the last EU summit hosted by Hungary. Orban had hoped to use that meeting to discuss competing with China to corner the EV market. Hungary’s National Economy Minister Márton Nagy had agreed to adhere to the phase-out of fossil fuel engines by 2035 but opposed putting tariffs on EVs from China. “We don’t believe in [the tariffs]. Protectionism is not a solution. We need more competition,” Nagy said. This event should have been an opportunity for EU ministers to collaborate their ideas for this multi-trillion dollar change that is coming in the near future, but Hungary has been ostracized. No one is actually voting or bringing new ideas to the table.

Uncoincidentally, Orban had met with both Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin ahead of the last summit while he was acting as the rotating president of the European Union. One diplomat said that Orban’s claims that he wanted to discuss peace were a rouse. They play into the hands of Putin and his war project. The Hungarian slogan to ‘make Europe great again’ is more about making Russia great again at this stage,” the diplomat told POLITICO.

The people are unable to decide the fate of Europe as it has fallen into the hands of the unelected elite in Brussels. Hungary has been ostracized by the European Union who does not even respect the nation enough to hear their viewpoints. Europe is under the rule of a collective dictatorship that will prove increasingly tyrannical as the economy turns down.