Fellow Talk
Fr 01 Apr 2022 | 14:30–15:30

The Dilemmas of a “New Transition” in Hungary

Fellow Talk by Beáta Bakó, chaired by Maciej Taborowski (Warsaw University, Polish Academy of Sciences)

Photo: Joanna Scheffel

How should the EU enforce the rule of law in the member states? Can democratic backsliding be prevented on EU level? Such questions are asked regularly by scholars and politicians, especially since Article 7 TEU procedures have been launched against Poland and Hungary. But what happens afterwards? How can the rule of law and liberal democracy legally be restored? As the 2022 Hungarian parliamentary election is approaching and the opposition has better chance to win than any time in the last decade, it is time to examine these overlooked questions.

The current opposition has already made promises for the case if they win, like adopting a new constitution, setting up a new electoral system or “making the Constitutional Court great again”. How realistic are these promises without a constitutional two-thirds majority? Are there any alternatives for the restitution of the rule of law within the frames of the current Basic Law adopted by the Fidesz-majority in 2011? Could the social demand for independent institutions be strengthened if the Basic Law is (partly or entirely) set aside? What should be learnt from the experiences of the democratic transition of 89/90 in this regard?

Beáta Bakó graduated from the Faculty of Law of Pázmány University Budapest in 2015. She completed an LL.M. in German Law at the University of Münster in 2017. She completed her PhD exam at the University of Münster in 2020 with magna cum laude. In her dissertation, Beáta examined the possible alternatives to the Article 7 TEU mechanism concerning the enforcement of the founding values of the European Union, focusing on the cases of Hungary and Poland as examples. During her postgraduate studies, Beáta was a visiting student at the EUI (2018), a visiting researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg (2017) and at the University of Warsaw (2018-2019). She has been a Max Weber Fellow at the EUI Florence in the cohort 2020-2021. Beáta also holds an M.A. degree in communication and media studies from the ELTE Budapest (2013). In 2017, she co-founded the independent Hungarian online newspaper Azonnali.hu, of which she has since been co-editor-in-chief.

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