I almost feel sorry for Anne Applebaum, staff writer for The Atlantic.
And it wasn’t only Orbán who won. His Fidesz party also picked up a slew of seats.
They now control 135 out of 199 seats in the Hungarian Parliament.
St. Matthew would have called it “fletus et stridor dentium”: “wailing and gnashing of teeth.”
Why didn’t the voters listen to Applebaum (and Bill Kristol, Jennifer Rubin, Max Boot, and other anti-populist globalists)? Why?
According to The Narrative™, it’s because Hungary isn’t, not really, a democracy.
Let’s parse that.
If a people votes for someone we don’t like, it’s not democracy.
We’ve seen that here in the United States.
In 2016, the people voted for Donald Trump.
But that was intolerable.
Hillary Clinton was the anointed candidate. She was a shoo-in. Donald (said the brethren) is ridiculous, repugnant, impossible.
Ergo, his victory in a free and open election was “anti-democratic.”
The wrong person won.
The victory, therefore, is illegitimate.
In America, that is, “democracy” means “Democrats win.”
It’s hard, I know, to get one’s mind around the logic.
But that’s chiefly because the persuasive motor here isn’t reason, not logic, but power.
For the Clintonistas, “democracy” means their right to rule.
Voting? Sure, they’re in favor of voting.
But Stalin had voting; so did Castro.
For them, as for America’s regime party, voting isn’t the expression of the will of the people.
It’s a process of certification.
The right candidate had already been selected. Voting was, at bottom, a matter of acclamation.
So it was supposed to be in Hungary.
Orbán has been in power since 2010. Many people felt that it was someone else’s turn.
How horrible is Viktor Orbán?
Cover the ears of children and maiden aunts.
Orbán had been friendly with Trump. He is, right now, today, friendly with Vladimir Putin, at least officially.
Beyond the company he keeps, Orbán is a conservative Christian.
He’s also a Hungarian nationalist.
“The Western liberals,” he told Carlson, “cannot accept that inside the Western civilization, there is a conservative national alternative which is more successful at everyday life than the liberal ones.
“America First is a very positive message here in Central Europe. If, for Donald Trump, ‘America First,’ [then] for us, Hungary could be first as well.”
Horrors! How un-EU-like!
One major impetus to Orbán’s success is down to Putin.
The Hungarians don’t like Russia. They do like Ukraine.
They disapprove of Putin’s invasion of their neighbor.
Why? Many reasons, but energy comes at the top of the list.
Hungary gets some 80 percent of its natural gas from Russia.
“The Hungarians,” Dreher notes, “prefer not to freeze in the dark next winter for the sake of Ukraine.”
Is that selfish?
Or is it merely practical?
The globalists, it almost goes without saying, think the Hungarians should freeze for the sake of their high-minded foreign policy—just so long as they themselves don’t have to do so.
The Wall Street Journal sniffs that in Hungary, “nearly all the largest TV and radio stations have been bought up by Mr. Orbán’s political allies.”
Unlike, say, in the United States where such a situation could never occur, right?
Again, The Wall Street Journal deplores the fact that Orbán used his majority in parliament “to rewrite election laws, redraw voting districts, and permit mail-in ballots without identity verification from communities that favor him.”
Sound familiar?
But here’s the kicker. “It is said that Orbán is too close to, or sympathetic to, Putin,” Hayward notes.
It wasn’t that long ago.
Orbán’s victory is a triumph for Hungarians.
It’s also a welcome talisman for anti-globalist patriots in the West.
It’s only the Anne Applebaums, Klaus Schwabs, and Goldman Sachses of the world who are in mourning.