2024 in Hungary

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Events in the year 2024 in Hungary.

Quick Facts Decades:, See also: ...

Thumb
2024
in
Hungary

Decades:
See also:Other events of 2024
List of years in Hungary
Close

Incumbents

Events

January

February

March

  • March 5 – Tamás Sulyok assumes office as president. His first act is to sign a bill formally authorizing the Foreign Ministry to ratify Sweden's accession to NATO.[16]
  • March 10 – Gergely Kovács and Zsuzsanna Döme, co-chairs of the Hungarian Two-Tailed Dog Party (MKKP), resign after the party rejects Kovács' participation in a primary election in Budapest District XII.[17] They reverse their decision next day.[18]
  • March 14 – Alexandra Szentkirályi becomes the Fidesz mayoral candidate in Budapest.[19]
  • March 15 –
    • Péter Magyar holds a rally at Andrássy út attended by around 10,000 people, during which he announces the launch of Talpra Magyarok Mozgalom.[citation needed]
    • Viktor Orbán holds a rally in Budapest, railing against the "western world" and Brussels.[20]
  • March 19 – Dávid Vitézy declares his candidacy for Mayor of Budapest.[21]
  • March 21–24 – Zoltán Perlai (DK) wins primary elections in Budapest District XXII.[22]
  • March 24 – Five people are killed and six others are injured after a rally car crashes into spectators during a race between Lábatlan and Bajót, Komárom-Esztergom County.[23]
  • March 26 – Péter Magyar releases a recording of him and his ex-wife Judit Varga, as proof for government crimes around the Völner-Schadl scandal. He holds a rally in Budapest that evening.[citation needed]
  • March 28 – The DK, MSZP and the PM agree on strategic cooperation, a common list for the upcoming European Parliament, local, and the 2026 parliamentary elections.[24]

April

May

  • May 5 – Péter Magyar holds a rally in Debrecen.[30]
  • May 8–10 – Chinese President Xi Jinping visits Hungary.[citation needed]
  • May 16 – 444.hu releases documents claiming the Hungarian Foreign Ministry knew about Russian cyberattacks against their systems they previously denied.[31][32]
  • May 17 – A debate is held between EP list leaders organised by Partizán. Tamás Deutsch (Fidesz) and Péter Magyar (TISZA) do not participate.[33]
  • May 18 – Two people are killed and five others are reported missing following a collision between two boats along the Danube River near Verőce, Pest County.[34]
  • May 22 – Klára Dobrev accuses President Tamás Sulyok of assisting the selling of Hungarian land to foreign owners.[35]
  • May 30 – The televised debate between EP election list leaders is held at Várkert Bazár, Budapest. Péter Magyar holds a demonstration in front of the venue.[36]
  • May 31 – The Budapest mayoral candidate debate is held between Gergely Karácsony and Dávid Vitézy, organized by Partizán.[37]

June

July

August

  • 21 August – A law reducing government support for Ukrainian refugees comes into effect, effectively limiting the number of those eligible for aid to refugees who originated from 13 regions of Ukraine deemed to have been directly affected by the Russian invasion.[72]
  • 22 August – The government announces that it would provide one way tickets to Brussels for migrants in response to the European Court of Justice imposing fines over Hungary's restrictive asylum policy.[73]
  • 25 August – A Claudiopolis InterCity train derails while arriving at Budapest Keleti station.[74]
  • 27 August – The Hungarian Evangelical Fellowship loses its license to operate its schools.[75]
  • 28 August – Csaba Mészáros, the principal of Imre Madách Gymnasium in Budapest, is fired from his position for not complying with new regulations banning students' use of mobile phones.[76]

September

  • 2 September – Students protest in front of the Ministry of Interior.[77]
  • 6 September – Gergő Bese, a pro-Fidesz parish priest from Dunavecse, is suspended from the Roman Catholic Church after reports emerge of him attending gay parties.[78]
  • 16 September – Flooding begins on the Danube[79]
  • 20 September – A protest is held in support of the Hungarian Evangelical Fellowship at Blaha Lujza tér, Budapest[80]
  • 24 September – At the last session of the outgoing City Assembly of Győr, the Fidesz-KDNP majority strips powers from the mayorship that was lost to the opposition in June.[81][82]
  • 25 September – Balázs Orbán states on a Mandiner podcast that Hungary, contrary to Ukraine, would not have defended the country against a Russian invasion, citing the lesson of 1956.[83][84] The statement generates heavy backlash,[85] and makes international news.[86]
  • 30 September – Outgoing Mayor of Zugló Csaba Horváth,[87] and Deputy Mayor Anett Bősz retire from politics.[88]

October

  • 1 October – Municipal governments elected in June take office nationwide.[89]
  • 3 October – The European Commission files a case in the European Court of Justice against Hungary over the latter's "sovereignty protection law" over concerns on civil rights.[90]
  • 4 October – Opening session of the General Assembly of Budapest. No deputy mayor is nominated.[91]
  • 5 October – Péter Magyar holds a protest in front of the MTVA building.[92]
  • 9 October – Viktor Orbán and Péter Magyar speak in the European Parliament.[93]
  • 17 October –
  • 19 October – DK announces that it would run a candidate in all 106 constituencies for the 2026 election.[97]
  • 20 October – In an interview with 444.hu, Antal Csárdi claims Péter Ungár and Dávid Vitézy coordinated their mayoral campaign with Antal Rogán.[98]
  • 23 October –
    • A poll from 21 Kutatóközpont measures TISZA above Fidesz for the first time.[99]
    • Viktor Orbán speaks in Milenáris Park,[100] and draws parallels between the USSR and the EU, alluding to Magyar as a western puppet and warn against future Ukrainian NATO troops as "eastern, Slavic troops" stationed in Hungary.[101] Counter-protestor Róbert Puzsér is refused entry.[102]
    • Péter Magyar holds a rally, marching from Bem József tér to Széna tér.[100] He declares the recruitment of 106 candidates for the 2026 election.[103]
  • 28 October – Viktor Orbán visits Tbilisi after the Georgian election[104]

November

  • 4 November – Bálint Somkuti, a researcher at the Sovereignty Protection Office, is fired for his Facebook post "He who does not respect (changed to: recognize) overwhelming force, is not (added: primarily) a hero, but a fool!", referring to the anniversary of the 1956 Soviet invasion of Hungary.[105]
  • 5 November – József Szájer returns to public life, founding the Free Europe Institute alongside Mária Schmidt[106] [107]
  • 7 November –
  • 10 November – Péter Magyar discloses claims of surveillance and blackmail against his party, dubbing it the "Hungarian Watergate".[110]
  • 11 November
    • The 2025 Budget is presented.[111]
    • A recording of Péter Magyar is leaked by his ex-girlfriend Evelin Vogel.[112]
  • 17 November – Dávid Vitézy announces the Podmaniczky Movement for public participation[113] (the name previously existed for his faction in the Budapest Assembly).
  • 18 November – Fidesz publishes its redistricting proposal for parliamentary constituencies[114]
  • 22 November – Upon the International Criminal Court's arrest warrant against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Viktor Orbán declares he will not comply, and invites him to Hungary.[115]
  • 28 November – 15 December – 2024 European Women's Handball Championship[116][117]

December

  • 3 December – Communications director Tamás Menczer figures in a scuffle with Péter Magyar at the entrance of Szikla utcai Children's Home in Pécs.[118][119]
  • 20 December – Hungary grants political asylum to Polish former deputy justice minister Marcin Romanowski, who is wanted in his home country on corruption charges.[120]

Deaths

March

April

September

  • 2 September – Mihály Kupa
  • 28 September – Dániel Karsai

October

Holidays

Source:[126]

Art and entertainment

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.