Tetszett a cikk?

The question is not whether Peter Szigeti, chairman of the National Elections Committee, should resign. He's not really the problem. The problem is with the bureaucrats who appointed him. The mistake was made when he was appointed. He shouldn't have been chosen.

What's the point of placing in charge of a supposedly independent body who will at some point start serving party political aims? Unless that's the point.

There is a certain kind of alternative history that is very popular, one based on parallel realities. It is based on a series of "what if..." questions. We could try it ourselves. What would have happened if the Orban government had chosen as head of the body responsible for guaranteeing free and fair elections somebody who "was less a fan of multi-party republicanism than a believer in a Horthy-style system that mixes parliamentarianism with a form of authoritarian voting?"

Objections would have been raised, throughout the Socialist-Liberal media. So why are we surprised that the opposition is concerned about Szigeti, a man who "is less a fan of multi-party republicanism than a believer in a Communist-style system that mixes a one-party system with self-government." He once served as editorial assistant at a new-left, neo-Marxist journal. In this capacity, he once wrote: "state socialist systems were better at guaranteeing fairness in the form of social equality than capitalist goods-based economies based on competing property that polarise people." Furthermore, he has accused the main opposition party of being an apologist for Nazism.

If the other side appointed as head of the National Elections Committee somebody who said that the Hungary's inter-war government was in any way better than its post-1990 democracy, accusing the Socialists of being apologists for Communism, a flurry of commentaries and leaders would be written attacking that person. Szigeti's appointment looks like a kind of post-surreal choreography. What kind of cost-benefit analysis, what kind of calculation led to the idea of letting Szigeti win out over other candidates? Would it have been impossible to find somebody else, somebody who may have had indirect links to the Left, but who could preserve at least the appearance of impartiality? Peter Szigeti does not have even this ability.

To be clear, the writer of these lines, unlike the paranoiacs of the Far Right, does not claim that Szigeti and his friends falsified election results. This did not happen. But it is not enough to be unbiased - you have to look unbiased as well. But our hero is incapable of giving that impression.

In the West, there are two approaches to appointing officials. One approach is based on the idea of the winner taking all. This happens in the United States, for example, where the President openly appoints ambassadors, prosecutors, supreme court justices and committee chairmen people who are close to his political party. The other approach is the Weberian model, which is based on the idea of an independent, professional public administration bureaucracy. There are plenty examples of this, primarily inside the European Union. In Hungary, at least in theory, every public servant from chief prosecutor to diplomat is an apolitical expert. Of course, there is plenty of speculation over this or that public servant's political leanings. There is plenty of politics behind that illusion of apolitical expertise. But our approach appears to embrace the drawbacks of both approaches.

The best solution to the Szigeti affair would be for him not to be responsible for the next referendum. Whether there is electoral fraud or not, so long as he remains, people will always suspect that it took place.

English version

In time and space

In place of Janos Kadar's shadow, the Socialists' new temporary headquarters is overshadowed by the shades of Ignac Martinovics and Bela Kun.

hvg.hu English version

Symbols

In central and eastern Europe, the symbols of totalitarian ideals were banned as part of the transition to democracy. Laws were passed, but it has become clear that there is no perfect solution. The symbols of left- and right-wing totalitarianism affect the public differently, as do the pictures of different movements' leaders. For some, these symbols cause derision, but for others even highly stylised forms of those symbols are a cause of fear, and so are useful to a radical minority bent on provoking the majority.

English version

Cross-country

It is most unlikely that millions of Asians will flood Hungary in the near future, and no more likely that workers will leave the poorer North East of Hungary to flood a wealthier western Hungary.

hvg.hu English version

Interview with the candidate

In a few days' time, the Free Democrats will elect a new president to succeed Gabor Kuncze. Fodor or Koka? Below, Gabor Fodor gives his views. He is seeking a fundamental change in the party's policies, he would enter into a dialogue with Fidesz and broaden out the party's electoral base. He would not shy away from state intervention aimed at helping the disadvantaged.

hvg.hu English version

"Viktor Orban is playing a dangerous game”

It's commonplace with Democratic countries that reporting on international affairs is more balanced and objective than that on domestic affairs. But faced with the Austrian press we have to concede that there are exceptions. Die Presse and Der Standard show few signs of objectiveness and balance. In their reports, there is the unmistakable whiff of cold civil war.

hvg.hu English version

Basescu blackmailing the RMDSZ

Zsolt Nagy, minister for IT and telecommunications in the Romanian government, stands accused of treachery and spying. The Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania is standing by its politician. The minister spoke to hvg.hu.

English version

Five terms - how many more?

Ibolya Dávid , recently confirmed in her position as leader of the Hungarian Democratic Forum, believes her party could have a government role after the next elections. The question is whether the sympathy felt to a party which manages to be everyone's enemy can be converted into votes.

HVG English version

Hungary Tomorrow project

Admit it: the idea of a round table is a good one. We all like the Arthur legends, and the lustre of the round table has not faded. Questions that affect everyone and that are more important than the grind of daily problems should be dealt with by some kind of joint method - just as in the legends of the Grail. This month, a round table of experts will gather under the name Hungary Tomorrow. Its task will be to help find a consensus in the questions that will affect society in the medium- and long-term, addressing pensions reform, education and competitiveness.

„Adminisztrációs hiba”: elveszett 3 hónapnyi felvétel Boldog István lehallgatásáról

„Adminisztrációs hiba”: elveszett 3 hónapnyi felvétel Boldog István lehallgatásáról

Jóval több illetéket szed be az állam a polgári peres eljárásokban az új adótörvény szerint

Jóval több illetéket szed be az állam a polgári peres eljárásokban az új adótörvény szerint

Csak a fideszesek körében népszerű a keleti nyitás politikája a Publicus mérése szerint

Csak a fideszesek körében népszerű a keleti nyitás politikája a Publicus mérése szerint

Az uniós polgárok közel fele szerint már nem az Egyesült Államok a legfőbb szövetséges

Az uniós polgárok közel fele szerint már nem az Egyesült Államok a legfőbb szövetséges