Hungarian government news briefing about Brussels, NGOs, education and other topics

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Budapest, April 27 (MTI) – Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and his government succeeded in defending Hungary’s interests in Wednesday’s plenary debate in the European Parliament, the government office chief told a weekly news briefing on Thursday. The government will submit its proposals related to the 2018 budget bill to parliament next Tuesday and the assembly’s vote is expected on June 15, he said.
János Lázár said at the same time that Hungary stood ready, “after evaluating the situation”, to make changes to fully align Hungarian laws with European legislation.
Concerning Hungary’s contested higher education law, one of the subjects of the EP plenary, Lázár said that “it is obvious that … it is not higher education [in Hungary] which could be compromised but the interests of the speculator [US financier] George Soros”.
Referring to EU infringement procedures against Hungary, he said Brussels had expressed concerns not about academic freedom but about business related matters regarding the free flow of services.
“It’s a lot easier that the debate does not have to be about academic freedom but about business matters,” Lázár said.
He also said that Kristóf Altusz, the government’s negotiator on the operation of foreign universities in Hungary, had discussed the issue surrounding the Central European University (CEU) with a number of embassies and foreign representatives, and would soon also discuss it with the US charge d’affaires.
Regarding EU matters, Lázár touched on the topic of illegal migration, noting that Hungary and the EU had decided to set up a working group to review Hungary’s tightened asylum laws. Hungary’s stance is to “stop migration rather than organise it”, Lázár said.
On the topic of a bill before parliament on the transparency of civil groups funded by foreign donors, Lázár said that organisations that accept money from abroad should not feel ashamed to declare their sources of financing. There are certain organisations that play major roles in Hungarian public life, representing the interests of illegal migrants against those of Hungary, the government office chief said, naming the Hungarian Helsinki Committee and the Civil Liberties Union (TASZ) as examples, referring to them as “Soros’ favourites”.
Answering a question, Lázár also mentioned environmental group Greenpeace, which he said could be expected to challenge all environmental protection-related aspects of the upgrade of the Paks nuclear plant. He said that if Greenpeace Hungary’s sources of financing became public, it could be determined whether the organisation represents its own views or the interests of “the green energy lobby”.
On another subject, Lázár said that over 470,000 respondents in the government’s national survey have returned their questionnaires by post, while another 52,000 answered the questions online.
Lázár also talked about Orbán’s upcoming second visit scheduled for this weekend to Brussels, where the prime minister will meet leaders of the European People’s Party and attend the special EU summit on Brexit. Regarding the EPP, Lázár repeated that ruling Fidesz had no intention of quitting the group, nor does it expect to be expelled from it. Lázár said he believed it was clear to the leaders of the EPP that calls for Fidesz’s expulsion from the group were coming not from the EPP but rather from “the Communists and the Socialists”.





