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A new Hungarian law could ban Pride events. Most EU countries are demanding a rethink

Hungarian Minister for European Union Affairs Janos Boka, front left, speaks with Italy's Permanent Representative to the EU Vincenzo Celeste, center, during a meeting of the general affairs ministers at the European Council building in Brussels, Tuesday, May 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Havana)

Key Points

  • A majority of EU states, including France, Germany and Spain, urged Hungary to revise its new law that would allow fines and facial-recognition-based bans on public Pride events.
  • EU ministers warned the legislation violates the bloc’s fundamental values of human dignity and equality and called on the European Commission to employ its rule-of-law toolbox if Hungary does not amend the measures.
  • Hungary’s government insists the law has been misunderstood and that there is “no such thing in Hungary as a Pride ban,” while its constitutional amendment prioritizes child protection over the right to assemble.
  • The EU is also examining a draft Hungarian law that would empower the Sovereignty Protection Office to monitor and ban organizations, and has frozen about €18 billion in funds over ongoing rule-of-law breaches.
  • MarketBeat previews top five stocks to own in July.

BRUSSELS (AP) — A large majority of European Union countries on Tuesday called on Hungary to revise a new law that allows bans on public events by LGBTQ+ communities, as pressure mounts on the country’s populist government over democratic backsliding.

In a declaration, at least 20 out of the EU's 27 nations, including France, Germany and Spain, expressed concern that the law passed in April allows for fines on people organizing or taking part in Pride events, and the use of facial recognition software to identify them.

“We are highly alarmed by these developments, which run contrary to the fundamental values of human dignity, freedom, equality and respect for human rights” enshrined in the EU treaties, they said.

They called on the European Commission — the powerful executive branch that monitors the respect of EU laws — “to expeditiously make full use of the rule of law toolbox at its disposal in case these measures are not revised accordingly.”

The declaration was published on social media as ministers for EU affairs gathered in Brussels for yet more talks on the way that Hungary’s staunchly nationalist government has introduced legislation that its partners see as undermining rule of law standards.

“I think it’s time that we consider the next steps, because this is getting pointless in continuing these hearings,” said Jessica Rosencrantz, the EU affairs minister of Sweden, which signed up to the declaration.

Rosencrantz said that the EU is “not just a geographical union but a union based on values, and in that sense we have to act strongly against countries not living up to our common principles.”

Hungary’s EU affairs minister, János Bóka, said that the new law has simply been misunderstood.

“There is no such thing in Hungary as a Pride ban,” Bóka told reporters. “I hope that after these discussions my colleagues around the table will walk out with a more nuanced view on the Hungarian legislation.”

The constitutional amendment passed in April declares that children’s rights to moral, physical and spiritual development supersede any right other than the right to life, including that to peacefully assemble. Hungary’s contentious “child protection” legislation prohibits the “depiction or promotion” of homosexuality to minors aged under 18.

The EU commissioner responsible for democracy, justice and rule of law, Michael McGrath, said that the “willingness is there” to take action against Hungary. He said that “a comprehensive analysis of the relevant legislation is underway now.”

McGrath also expressed “very serious concerns” about another piece of draft legislation in Hungary. This bill would allow the government to monitor, restrict, penalize and potentially ban organizations it deems a threat to national sovereignty.

The draft law marks a significant escalation of the government’s long-running crackdown on critical media and nongovernmental organizations.

It would allow Hungary ’s contentious Sovereignty Protection Office to identify organizations that influence public debate or voter sentiment in ways it considers detrimental to Hungary’s interests.

“We believe it is a breach of EU law, including a breach of internal market freedoms and also a breach of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union,” McGrath said. “We stand ready to use the tools at our disposal” to oppose it, he added.

As part of its many legal disputes with Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s government, the European Commission has deprived Hungary of access to billions of euros in EU funds, in part because of fears that the money may be misused.

“At this point in time, about 18 billion euros ($20 billion) is not available to Hungary. That’s because of their own rule of law breaches. I wish it were otherwise,” McGrath told reporters.

Despite rosy government projections, Hungary’s economy has for at least two years been in a state of stagnation, partly becaue of the frozen EU funds. Struggling under high inflation, Hungary’s gross domestic product dipped back into negative territory in the first quarter of 2025, the only contraction in the EU.

Hungary has also drifted ever further from the EU fold over the Russia-Ukraine war, repeatedly holding up the passage of multibillion-euro aid packages to Kyiv and sanctions on Moscow. But its European partners are growing more inclined to proceed without Orbán’s government.

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Justin Spike contributed to this report from Budapest, Hungary.

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