- The campaign provoked a furious reaction from prominent EU politicians
- EU Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas dismissed the campaign as “fake news”
BUDAPEST: Hungary launched a new anti-immigration media campaign on
Tuesday in which it accused George Soros and EU Commission chief
Jean-Claude Juncker of allegedly supporting illegal migration, but which
Brussels immediately dismissed as “fake news”.
According to the Hungarian government’s Facebook page, the media blitz —
funded with taxpayers’ money — is expected to include billboard posters
featuring images of the liberal US billionaire Soros and a smiling
Juncker above the words: “You too have a right to know what Brussels is
preparing”.
“They want to bring in the mandatory settlement quota; weaken member
states’ rights to border defence; facilitate immigration with a migrant
visa,” it continues.
The campaign provoked a furious reaction from prominent EU politicians,
including from Joseph Daul, president of the European People’s Party
grouping which includes both Juncker and right-wing Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orban’s Fidesz party.
In a series of tweets, Daul condemned the campaign, calling its claims “deceitful, misleading and… not based on facts”.
Daul denounced Hungary’s attacks on Juncker and defended him as a “true Christian Democrat and a real European leader”.
He went on to remind Hungary that “decisions in Brussels, including on
migration, are taken collectively by EU governments” and the European
Parliament, both of which include Hungarian representatives.
The presence of Fidesz within the EPP has long been a source of
controversy but there have been no official moves by any of the other
centre-right parties in the grouping to expel it.
Orban’s government, which has frequently clashed with the EU on
migration, has regularly undertaken similar campaigns in the past,
including “Let’s Stop Brussels” and “Don’t let Soros have the last
laugh.”
In recent years, Orban has blasted the Hungarian-born 88-year-old
philanthropist and investor as a “public enemy” for allegedly backing
uncontrolled mass immigration.
At the same time, Orban’s government has frequently been accused of
using anti-Semitic tropes and imagery in its campaigns against Soros,
claims it denies.
In recent months, pro-Orban media have also attacked Dutch MEP Judith
Sargentini — the author of a critical report about Hungary that formed
the basis of EU legal action against Budapest — and Juncker’s deputy
Frans Timmermans.
“Brussels continues to want to support illegal immigration,” Zoltan
Kovacs, a government spokesman, told reporters in Budapest on Tuesday.
“Hungarians need to know about this, that’s why the latest information
campaign has been launched,” he said, denying it is part of the upcoming
European Parliament election campaign.
Kovacs said plans in “drawers in Brussels” included hikes in financial
funding of NGOs and the creation of a special migration fund.
EU Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas dismissed the campaign as “fake news”.
“The Hungary government campaign beggars belief,” he told a briefing in Brussels.
“It is shocking that such a ludicrous conspiracy theory has reached the
mainstream to the extent it has. There is no conspiracy. Hungarians
deserve facts, not fiction,” he said.