Meet the man who could oust Viktor Orban, Hungary’s strongman
Gergely Karacsony wants his country to stop being a byword for cronyism
GERGELY KARACSONY, the mayor of Budapest, and Viktor Orban, the prime minister of Hungary, could not be less alike. Mr Karacsony presides over the cosmopolitan capital; Mr Orban counts on the rural hinterland as his base. Mr Orban has near-total control over Fidesz, the party that has had near-total control of Hungary since 2010; Mr Karacsony owes his job to an ungainly alliance of six parties. The football-mad Mr Orban built a 3,800-seat stadium in his home village (population: 1,700); Mr Karacsony, a former academic, campaigned against an expensive athletics stadium in his city (population: 1,000 times larger). For anyone still struggling to tell the difference, Mr Karacsony helpfully points out that: “He is short and fat, and I am tall and slim.”
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The anti-Orban”
Europe May 8th 2021
- Ten years after Spain’s indignados protests
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- How the Irish Republic is making the best of Brexit
- France worries about how to handle released terrorists
- In Turkey’s latest covid-19 lockdown, alcohol sales are barred
- Meet the man who could oust Viktor Orban, Hungary’s strongman
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