EU approves a $106 billion loan package to help Ukraine
Digest more
A sharp conflict has erupted between Brussels and Hungary: the European Union’s Court of Justice has deemed Hungary’s child protection law unlawful, triggering strong international reactions. In Western conservative circles,
Hungary’s incoming Prime Minister Peter Magyar is planning to replace Viktor Orban’s all-male cabinet with a more diverse team of top officials as he looks to make a clean break with his country’s illiberal past.
Both countries look forward to a future beyond ousted authoritarian leader Viktor Orbán
Hungarian election winner Péter Magyar is announcing the first round of his incoming cabinet members following his party's landslide victory over Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.
The Court of Justice of the European Union ruled on Tuesday that Hungary's 2021 LGBTQ law breached EU founding values.
In his first explosive interview with Viktor Orban’s state-run media, Hungary’s election winner Peter Magyar divulged a crucial detail about the future of the heavily centralized economy: he would claw back the shares in public companies that had been parked with an Orban-aligned foundation.
The European Court of Justice has ruled that Hungary's legislation banning LGBTQ+ content for minors violates EU law.
As many in Hungary celebrated the defeat of Viktor Orbán last weekend, others, who have consumed little but state media for the past decade, felt crippling fear.
bne IntelliNews on MSN
Hungary's plans to join the euro but it won't be easy
By Ben Aris in Berlin For sixteen years, the question of Hungary joining the euro was not really a question at all. Viktor Orban's government was antagonistic towards Brussels, his party had deep eurosceptic roots,