Balázs Orbán, political adviser to Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and a key member of Hungary’s Parliament, has launched a scathing rebuttal against recent statements by former U.S. President Barack Obama.
While Obama, speaking at the Democracy Summit in London, attacked sovereign leaders like Viktor Orbán, accusing them of eroding freedoms, Balázs Orbán cut through the rhetoric:
“The left’s playbook hasn’t changed: deploy Soros-funded ‘experts’ to deliver lofty lectures and hurl vague, baseless accusations against a sovereign nation.
No surprise that @BarackObama, a long-time champion of globalist ideology and identity politics, is unsettled by a Hungary that has consistently and successfully defended its sovereignty against international pressure for the past fifteen years.
Let’s remember this is the same person who once sent his senior foreign policy official, Victoria Nuland, armed with a two-page list of demands detailing how Hungary should restructure its constitution.
Mr. Obama, this approach has grown tiresome. #Hungary neither requires your validation nor seeks your permission. The nation’s future will be determined solely by the will of the Hungarian people.”
The spark came last month when Obama, in a roundtable with Hungarian and Polish dissident activists like Sándor Léderer—co-founder of an anti-corruption group funded by globalist NGOs—and Stefania Kapronczay, former director of the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union, warned of an alleged “wave of authoritarianism” threatening the world.
Obama stated: “We’re seeing politicians attack civil society, undermine press freedom, and weaponize the judicial system,” a clear jab at the “illiberal democracy” Viktor Orbán has successfully forged to protect Hungary from the migratory and cultural agenda imposed by Brussels and Washington.
But who is truly eroding democracy? Obama, whose legacy includes mass surveillance and alliances with questionable regimes, now preaches from his elitist bubble.
Viktor Orbán, the conservative statesman who has kept Hungary a bulwark against uncontrolled immigration and the dissolution of Christian values, has implicitly backed this counteroffensive.
Sources close to the Hungarian government highlight how Orbán’s policies have driven 4.5% economic growth in 2024, per European Commission data, while rejecting the migrant quotas that Obama and Europe’s left promote as “humanitarian.”
Balázs Orbán, as Fidesz’s ideologue, has reiterated in prior interventions—like his 2022 Disidentia analysis on “illiberal democracy”—that Hungary’s model prioritizes the people’s will over liberal dogmas, inspiring conservatives globally from Trump to leaders in Italy and Poland.
Historically, Obama has clashed with Orbán: in 2011, his State Department criticized Hungarian reforms as “anti-democratic,” ignoring how they strengthened judicial independence against foreign influences.
Today, with Trump back in power, Obama’s warnings smack of nostalgia for a unipolar order that stifled nationalist voices. Balázs Orbán’s reply exposes the hypocrisy: while Obama touts “press freedom,” his administration hounded whistleblowers like Snowden.
Ultimately, this clash underscores the global divide: on one side, Orbán’s vision of a Europe of sovereign nations; on the other, Obama’s liberal universalism pushing open borders and conservative censorship. Balázs Orbán has spoken clearly, and Hungary responds with facts, not rhetoric.
Viktor Orbán has become a guardian of true democracy—one that answers to the people, not the Davos elites. Naturally, this makes those beholden to the elite uncomfortable, prompting their attacks.
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