What is it about?

The Article discusses the democratic backsliding after 2010 in Hungary, and how it affected the state of human rights in the country, a Member State of the European Union. The main argument of the Article is that paradoxically the non-legitimate 1989 constitution provided full-fledged protection of fundamental rights, while the procedurally legitimate 2011 constitution-making resulted in curtailment of rights and their constitutional guarantees. The Article first describes the democratic transition that occurred in 1989–1990 as a rights revolution and the results of the 2011 “illiberal” constitution, called Fundamental Law, as counter-revolution. The second part of the Article illustrates the constitutional and statutory regulation of human rights protection after the 1989 “rule of law revolution,” and the activist jurisprudence of the first Constitutional Court using the concept of an “invisible constitution” to protect human rights. The third part discusses the rights provisions of the new Fundamental Law and several statutes dismantling the guarantees of human rights, with special attention to the decreased possibilities of state institutions, such as the Constitutional Court, the ordinary judiciary and ombudsmen, as well as civil society organizations to effectively protect fundamental rights. The fourth part assesses the efforts of European institutions to force the Hungarian government to comply with the human rights standards laid down in the European Convention of Human Rights and in the Treaty of the European Union. The Article concludes that neither internal nor external challenges could prevent the development of a new authoritarian regime with no guaranteed human rights.

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Why is it important?

Hungary is a Member State of the European Union, and its democratic and human rights backsliding can serve as a bad model within the Union, which is based on the values of liberal democracy, rule of law and fundamental rights.

Perspectives

The European Union should arm itself against authoritarian Member States attacking its core values. But liberal democracy within a country can only be saved by the people of that particular country through free and fair elections, which is not provided in the current Hungarian constitutional system.

Gabor Halmai

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This page is a summary of: Rights Revolution and Counter-Revolution: Democratic Backsliding and Human Rights in Hungary, Law & Ethics of Human Rights, May 2020, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1515/lehr-2020-2013.
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