Constitution for a new Hungary – the domestic and regional implications

The new constitution will come into force in Hungary on 1 January 2012[1]. Its adoption is part of the state reform which the Fidesz party led by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has been implementing since it won the election in April 2010. Fidesz, along with the Christian Democrats which support it, ha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors Sadecki, Andrzej, Gniazdowski, Mateusz
Format Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published Poland OSW The Centre for Eastern Studies 2011
OSW Ośrodek Studiów Wschodnich im. Marka Karpia
SeriesOSW Commentary
Subjects
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Summary:The new constitution will come into force in Hungary on 1 January 2012[1]. Its adoption is part of the state reform which the Fidesz party led by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has been implementing since it won the election in April 2010. Fidesz, along with the Christian Democrats which support it, has a qualified majority of two-thirds of the votes in parliament and may introduce solutions to facilitate its rule without support from other groupings and it is taking advantage of this opportunity. One example of this has been the amendment of the constitution ten times followed by a speedy adoption of a new constitution. The next step will be passing dozens of constitutional laws which regulate essential areas of the functioning of the state over the next few months.