Europe's center-right suspends Hungary's ruling party

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Parliament’s main center-right grouping voted on Wednesday to suspend Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s ruling Fidesz Party until further notice amid concerns that it has violated EU principles on the rule of law.

The decision of the European People’s Party (EPP), made by a vote of delegates from member parties meeting in Brussels, came after widespread calls for Orban’s party to be disciplined over its anti-immigration campaigns and contested judicial reforms.

“The suspension entails: no attendance at any party meeting; no voting rights; no right to propose candidates for posts,” EPP president Joseph Daul said in a tweet.

Earlier, the EPP’s lead candidate for the European Parliament’s elections in May, Manfred Weber of Germany, backed the suspension of Fidesz pending an inquiry into its actions, which he said would have “enormous political bearing”.

Orban, a feisty nationalist who has often clashed with the European Union over his anti-immigration campaigns and judicial reforms, told the EPP delegates that his party could not accept that proposal.

According to a document seen by Reuters, the evaluation would be made by a committee chaired by former European Council head Herman Van Rompuy.

“As a political family we must not only have principles and speak about values, but we must also lead by example,” the document said.

The head of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, and 13 sister parties in the EPP have called for Fidesz’s expulsion, but Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, head of Germany’s Christian Democrats, proposed a compromise ahead of the meeting.

Kramp-Karrenbauer, frontrunner eventually to succeed German Chancellor Angela Merkel, attended Wednesday’s meeting in person to confirm to delegates that her party, the largest in the EPP, would back suspending Fidesz and setting up the committee.

Orban’s chief of staff signaled that Fidesz would quit the EPP rather than see its membership suspended, saying it was a question of national “dignity”.

The decision of both Orban and Kramp-Karrenbauer to attend in person what would normally be a routine administrative meeting highlighted how high the stakes are: EPP membership for Fidesz confers mainstream respectability and influence that other populist parties lack.

CHALLENGE

The Fidesz issue poses a particularly difficult challenge for Weber. His chances of succeeding Juncker as head of the executive Commission will be reduced without the votes of Fidesz’s European lawmakers, of whom there are currently 12.

On Wednesday Juncker, who is also from the EPP, repeated his call for Fidesz to be kicked out of the grouping.

“I think that Mr Orban is a long way from basic Christian Democratic values,” he told German radio.

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Juncker was the target of a Hungarian government poster campaign depicting him as a proponent of mass immigration into Europe and as a puppet manipulated by Hungarian-American billionaire philanthropist George Soros.

The EPP grouping, the largest in the European Parliament, is also concerned over Orban’s campaign against the private Central European University in Budapest that Soros founded.

Sources close to Weber said Orban had at least partially met the German conservative’s conditions for keeping Fidesz in the EPP, including by apologizing to colleagues in the grouping for labeling them immigration-backing “useful idiots”.

Additional reporting by Madeline Chambers and Andreas Rinke in Berlin, writing by Thomas Escritt; Editing by Gareth Jones

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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