The Atlantic

How Hungary Ran George Soros Out of Town

The fate of one civil-society group is a disturbing case study of budding authoritarians setting the rules in Europe.
Source: Bernadett Szabo / Reuters

PARIS—Has Hungary’s Viktor Orbán won this round against the European Union? The announcement Tuesday that George Soros’s Open Society Foundations (OSF) will move its headquarters out of Budapest and set up shop in Berlin, a victim of the Orbán government’s crackdown on foreign NGOs, certainly seems to indicate as much. The question now is will the European Union push back? And how?

Orbán, whose right-wing, increasingly authoritarian Fidesz party secured another term in Hungary’s national elections last month, has for years been waging an escalating war against Soros. The billionaire financier and philanthropist survived Nazi-occupied Hungary as a boy, and his foundation has been funding in Hungary and across Eastern Europe since before the end of the Cold War, as well as programs in Hungary and across Europe aimed at supporting immigrants. It’s the immigration programs that have riled up Orbán. Ever since the migration crisis of 2015, Fidesz has been depicting the nation and Europe as . Before the elections, Fidesz spent millions on ad campaigns Open Society called anti-Semitic, including with his arms around opposition leaders who are taking wire cutters to the border fence.

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