Yesterday was a truly special day in Hungary’s post-communist history: skinheads gathered in National Election Office’s premises to prevent an opposition MP from filing a referendum question.
Fidesz
introduced a controversial law in March 2015 that would forbid shops to open on
Sundays. The ban has been highly unpopular among voters and hence opposition
parties have frequently tried to hold a referendum on the question.
Regarding
national referenda: although Fidesz actively used referenda when it was itself
in opposition to combat the then-government’s plans, when Fidesz came to power
in 2010, they were quick to install changes that would make it materially
harder to hold one, and they narrowed the topics in which referenda can be held
quite substantially.
Furthermore,
one of the more odd novelties Fidesz introduced was, that regarding a specific
topic, at a given time only one referendum text proposal can be before the National
Election Office which scrutinises the referendum’s proposed question for not
being misleading etc.. If there’s a second referendum question on the same
topic, its submission to the Office has to wait until the actually analysed
question is decided upon.
The
government has played this rule by organising private persons to file
repeatedly deliberately unacceptable questions. These wrong questions would
then be ‘analysed’ by the Office for a couple of weeks, and then be rejected;
leading to the next ‘private individual’ to instantly file the next
deliberately unacceptable referendum question.
Now
you may ask, what happens when several persons wish to file a referendum question
on the same topic to the Office. Well, Fidesz’s law says that in this case, the
winner is the person to first physically stamps his or her question in the
Office’s premises at a defined spot.
The Fidesz government exploited this rule by using those ‘private persons’ and the eager assistance of the Office itself, to prevent opposition parties from filing a referendum on the Sunday ban 18 times now. This included disqualifying the opposition for several technical reasons. In one case, the opposition question was disqualified because the MP submitted his question a few minutes too early. In another case, an opposition MP had the perfect timing, however the Office decided to disqualify it and accept the question of another person, based on the other person having entered the building first. The problem is, if one takes legal action against such a decision, the court procedure may take years, delaying any referendum even further.
The Fidesz government exploited this rule by using those ‘private persons’ and the eager assistance of the Office itself, to prevent opposition parties from filing a referendum on the Sunday ban 18 times now. This included disqualifying the opposition for several technical reasons. In one case, the opposition question was disqualified because the MP submitted his question a few minutes too early. In another case, an opposition MP had the perfect timing, however the Office decided to disqualify it and accept the question of another person, based on the other person having entered the building first. The problem is, if one takes legal action against such a decision, the court procedure may take years, delaying any referendum even further.
What happened
yesterday?
Yesterday
was the day when Hungary’s Supreme Court would take a decision on the
outstanding question on the Sunday’s shop ban. So, an opposition MP walked to
the Office at 6 a.m. to wait for the decision and try to file his question quickly
once it’s there; for the 19th time now. However, there also came an
elderly lady and a young gentleman, followed by a bunch of muscled skinheads,
and so they waited hour after hour for the court decision to arrive.
Eventually,
the MP was physically prevented by the skins to file his question – they
ensured that the lady would get there first. So, that’s the 19th
time now the government has prevented the opposition from filing a question,
but for the first time this happened with physical force, rather than
administrative or legal tricks. The whole spectacle played out amid intensive
media coverage.
There
are some further fine details to this action. Independent media reported that
the skinheads blocked the Office’s main entrance for several hours, journalists
for instance had to enter through the back door. The opposition MP called the
police, who entered the scene only to leave shortly later, without having taken
any action on the skinheads blockading a public building’s entrance, or even
having checked their identity.
While
all of Hungary’s non-government-controlled media was strongly focussed on
what’s happening, state media was for much of the day completely silent on the
issue. Later the day, there was a brief piece of news, informing that a
socialist MP wasn’t able to file his questions, because ‘some others have been
quicker’.
Who dunnit?
Everyone
is quite aware that it’s only the government who has any interest in preventing
such a referendum to ever happen. The question has been, of course, whether
there’s any actual link to the government. While there is no direct evidence,
there are some much-telling facts here.
Independent
media soon found out that some of the skins involved belong to the security
personnel of FC Ferencvaros, Hungary’s most popular football club. The
president of this club is Gabor Kubatov, Fidesz’s vice president. The club’s
security guards have been used by fidesz earlier as well e.g. by guarding
Fidesz’s party HQ against protesters in 2014.
Two
of yesterday’s skins as security men of Ferencvaros, club of Fidesz vice
President Kubatov
Furthermore,
the old lady escorted by the skins turned out to be the wife of a former Fidesz
mayor, and a prominent face of a former nationwide Fidesz campaign. Fidesz
reacted rather relaxed to the events, with e.g. PM Orban stating there’s been
some scramble in the past as well in such situations, and insisting the
opposition is only focussed on creating a scandal.
These
responses, state media coverage and the police’s handling the issue are further
clear indication on who’s behind this act.
Final
it became known that several of the skins – as evidenced by their own facebook
accounts – have far-right affiliations and/or have been in jail repeatedly.
Far-right
henchmen blocking the entrance of the National Election Office