The Orbán Regime Intimidates Roma Community to Win the Elections

In a neck to neck electoral race 10 per cent of Roma votes are too important to lose

2 February 2022

Edit Zgut-Przybylska

Visegrad Insight Fellow

United opposition should include the Roma into their broad alliance to prevent corrupt tactics of the Fidesz government.

After 12 years of authoritarian remodeling of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, more attention should be paid to the intimidation tactics of Fidesz during the campaign. By using informal power, the ruling party created a massive system of dependencies both within the Roma political community and the electorate. The united opposition should fight for the inclusion of Hungary’s biggest ethnic minority group that remained without political representation once again. 

‘There is a saying within the Interior Ministry and even within the government that whoever is a member of the family is treated within the family ‘ — according to a leaked tape, this is what the Government Commissioner for Roma relations, Attila Sztojka told the representatives of the National Roma Self-Government (ORÖ). 

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Edit Zgut-Przybylska

Visegrad Insight Fellow

Dr. Edit Zgut-Przybylska is an Assistant Professor at the Institute of Philosophy and Sociology (IFIS) in the Polish Academy of Sciences (PAN) and a visiting fellow at CEU Democracy Institute. Her research interest covers informality and populism in the context of democratic backsliding and the constraining role of the European Union. She is also a visiting lecturer at the Foreign Service Institute of the US State Department. Synthetic versions of her work are available on POLITICO EUROPE, Foreign Policy and Visegrad Insight. Edit held a re:constitution fellowship 2022/2023, a Rethink.CEE fellowship at the German Marshall Fund of the United States and a Visegrad Insight Fellowship. She previously worked at Political Capital Research Institute and prior to that, she was a journalist at various media outlets in Hungary.

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