Budapest court rejects mayor’s lawsuit, city appeals

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The Budapest Municipal Court has rejected a lawsuit filed by the city’s mayor with the aim of “dodging” the payment of the solidarity tax, Finance Minister Mihály Varga said on Facebook on Wednesday.
As the country’s richest municipality, Budapest, like several other local councils, is required to pay a solidarity contribution totalling HUF 57.8 billion (EUR 154.6 million) to poorer localities, Varga said.
The mayor refuses to pay this contribution mandated by the central government, so he filed a lawsuit with the Budapest Municipal Court challenging its legality, which has now been rejected, the minister said.
Varga said the mayor, Gergely Karácsony, inherited HUF 214 billion in reserves from his predecessor, István Tarlós, in 2019, but had by now “bankrupted the capital”.
The municipal council has exhausted its reserves despite having record high tax revenues, with business tax revenues set to exceed HUF 271 billion this year, Varga added.
Karácsony said on Facebook that the city council will appeal the court’s decision.





