Budapest holds first Pride march since 2010
Budapest held its first official Pride march since 2010, with thousands marching despite far-right sabotage attempts, signaling a fragile but significant shift in LGBTQ rights after Orbรกnโs anti-gay p
Thousands of people hit Budapestโs streets on Saturday for the cityโs first official Pride march since Viktor Orbรกn, the long-time prime minister know
Read Full Story at France 24 โWhy This Matters
The return of Budapest Pride after a 14-year hiatus is more than a symbolic reassertion of queer visibilityโitโs a quiet but defiant challenge to Hungaryโs authoritarian drift under Orbรกn. In a city where state propaganda has systematically demonized LGBTQ identities as "Western decadence," the march signals that resistance persists even as civic space narrows. The turnout, despite coordinated far-right disruption, suggests a generational shift in how younger Hungarians view rights and identity.
Background Context
Hungaryโs LGBTQ movement has faced relentless legal and rhetorical attacks since 2020, when Orbรกnโs government amended the constitution to define marriage as exclusively between a man and woman and banned "propaganda" targeting minorsโa move modeled after Russiaโs anti-gay laws. The intervening years saw Pride events either canceled or relegated to underground venues, with organizers facing police surveillance and far-right militias like the *Hunters* group openly threatening violence.
What Happens Next
The immediate test will be whether this Pride outing emboldens similar events elsewhere in Hungary, particularly in conservative strongholds where queer communities remain invisible. Internationally, the EUโs muted response to Orbรกnโs anti-LGBTQ policies may face renewed scrutiny, especially if Budapest Pride becomes a recurring flashpoint. Long-term, the movementโs survival could hinge on whether it can translate street-level visibility into sustained political pressure or local alliances.
Bigger Picture
Budapest Prideโs resurgence reflects a broader pattern in Central Europe, where LGBTQ activism is increasingly becoming a proxy battle between illiberal nationalism and transnational queer solidarity. As governments in Poland and Slovakia adopt similar anti-gay measures, Hungaryโs event may serve as a test case for whether grassroots resistance can outlast state repressionโor if the regionโs LGBTQ communities will be pushed to the margins indefinitely.

