Mayor Karácsony discussed the direct EU funding of Budapest with von der Leyen

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Budapest Mayor Gergely Karácsony met European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Strasbourg on Tuesday and thanked her for standing up for the Budapest Pride event; they also discussed the matter of EU funding for Budapest.
After the meeting, Karácsony said on Facebook: “No matter which way the government turns, Budapest will stay in Europe.”

Karácsony said he had thanked von der Leyen for standing by the Budapest Pride march held on June 28. “The president of the European Commission agreed that Budapest held a true celebration of freedom and showed its strength and stood by its principles and values,” he said. “Budapest Pride, the failure to ban it and Budapest’s stance for freedom” will be tabled in the European Parliament on Wednesday, he said.
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Direct EU funding of Budapest on the horizon?
Karácsony and von der Leyen also discussed EU funding for Budapest. Karácsony said the government was turning the lack of resources due to the rule-of-law procedure against the capital, “Budapest is probably the only capital without a single signed grant contract.” He said he presented a proposal to von der Leyen on channelling suspended funding directly to cities.
“It was clear that the European Commission is closely monitoring the developments in Hungary, the government policy systematically dismantling European values,” he said.
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European metropolises, including Budapest, “often represent European values more consistently than national governments, and have become islands of the rule of law”, he added. “That trend is one of the reasons why rule-of-law reports and country-specific recommendations should also review the situation of municipalities,” Karácsony said.
Suspending EU funds “only tool EU can use against member”, says Karácsony
Suspending EU funds is “perhaps the only tool the EU could use against a member state, but it is also a double-edged sword as it could also turn citizens against the EU,” Budapest mayor Gergely Karácsony said in Strasbourg on Wednesday.





