Interview – Orbán to submit constitutional amendment on Monday

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Budapest, October 9 (MTI) – Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said he will submit on Monday an amendment to the constitution to lawmakers to reflect the outcome of a national referendum Hungary held on EU mandatory migration quotas on Oct.2.

Orbán said in an interview taped on Saturday afternoon and broadcast on public Kossuth radio on Sunday morning that he expects all MPs to support the amendment which clearly states that Hungary will not allow the forced resettlement of foreign nationals.

The amendment also states that foreign nationals who wish to live in Hungary may only do so by submitting an individual application that will be evaluated within the legal framework established by parliament, Orbán said.

The amendment also establishes that the form and the structure of the state, the territory of the country and its people belong to the constitutional identity of the Hungarian nation, Orbán said. This cannot be amended or overwritten by any external law, he added.

The amendment will not change the work of the National Immigration and Citizenship Office, rather it will reinforce the current legal position by inscribing in the basic law a prohibition on any modification by Brussels.

“I think we’ve legislated a nice text. This benefits the Hungarian Constitution and clearly expresses the will of the people,” Orbán said. The amended text will “remain within” the bounds of EU law, he said, adding that it has already been sent to European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, he added.

Parliament’s decision will be a “means of assistance”, as there were not enough voters turning out for the referendum to validate its result with legal force, Orban said.

It’s appropriate for the prime minister to submit the amendment as the will of the people must be afforded its proper importance, he added.

Asked whether he would count on the support of the Jobbik party, Orbán said he expected the support of all lawmakers, adding that it is not the prime minister they must support.

“If they had to support me, then I don’t believe I could count on their support,” he added, noting that that was the impression he got from the most recent parliamentary debates.

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