This week Budapest’s journalists were abuzz with the rumours that an ‘important announcement’ was to be made on Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s Facebook page. Those who thought this would be an acknowledgment that the revelations from the Pegasus project about intensive surveillance of Hungary’s leading investigative journalists and civil rights lawyers merited a parliamentary enquiry were left disappointed.
Instead, Orbán announced that Hungary is to have a referendum on five questions relating to ‘the future of Hungarian children’. All relate to LGBT+ education — an issue of contention between Orbán and the EU.
The calling of the referendum is singular in that such polls have till now been impossible under the rolling state of public health emergency maintained (under different names) continuously since March last year.
This attempt to draw attention away from the Pegasus story marks an evolution of government strategy in previous days, which has been to suppress coverage of the story in state and Fidesz controlled media, and for ministers to deny awareness of such surveillance occurring when questioned by independent journalists.
Though remarkable in terms of its revelations about technical capacity (including the ability to compromise trusted apps like Signal) the disclosures from Pegasus are not so remarkable when looked at in the context of Fidesz’s history and shared psychology.
Although the founding members of the party in 1988 were a diverse lot, a shared characteristic of those who have endured or joined its leadership overtime are their close familial and personal ties to the apparatus of the Communist state and it’s culture of mass surveillance.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
SubscribeHasn’t Hungary mostly vaccinated with the Russian Sputnik? So Putin has put a surveillance chip in the arm of every Hungarian…