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Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s party enacted the ban, but Budapest’s mayor allowed the event to go on. The police sat on the sidelines.
Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s effort to ban Pride backfired, drawing a huge throng in support of LGBTQ+ rights and hurting him and his party ahead of elections next year.
Following the completion of a public survey on Ukraine’s EU membership, a new ad campaign has appeared in Hungary portraying ...
An unprecedented crowd of between 100- and 200-thousand people marched at the 30th Budapest Pride on Saturday. The Prime ...
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine commented on the use of caricatures of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy by Hungary's ...
Orban said Friday that while police would not break up the Pride march, those who took part should be aware of "legal consequences". Parade organisers risk up to a year in prison, and attendees ...
Hundreds of thousands of people gathered in Budapest on Saturday to mark the 30th anniversary of Pride, defying a ...
The largest protest in Budapest since the fall of the communism has left Hungary’s prime minister on perilous ground ...
There are multiple flaws in Fidesz's narrative that the record-breaking attendance of Budapest Pride was actually part of ...
Opposition leader Peter Magyar says, "no one else has managed to mobilize such a massive crowd for a demonstration through ...