Jump to content

Force and Determination (Hungary)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Force and Determination
Erő és elszántság
LeaderLászló Balázs
Zsolt Tyirityán
Founded8 July, 2017
Merger ofIdentitesz[1]
Sixty-Four Counties Youth Movement[1]
Split fromJobbik[2]
IdeologyNeo-Nazism[2][1]
Hungarian nationalism
Hard Euroscepticism
Antiziganism
Political positionFar-right
National Assembly
0 / 199
European Parliament
0 / 100

Force and Determination (Hungarian: Erő és elszántság) was a far-right Hungarian nationalist political movement founded on 8 July, 2017, by dissident members of Jobbik during that parties effort to moderate its platform.[2]

History

[edit]

Jobbik split

[edit]

Jobbik had, since its foundation in 2003, been the main party of the Far-Right in Hungary, holding positions such as ethno-nationalism, a rejection of both Capitalism and Socialism, and even Pan-Turanism while also running a paramilitary, the Magyar Gárda, from 2007 to 2009.[3] However, in the lead up to the 2014 Hungarian parliamentary election, Jobbik's leadership drastically changed the party platform in what they called "néppártosodás" with party president Gábor Vona promising to "cut the wildlings" in reference to the more radical members of the party.[4][5][6]

During this transition, radical members of the party led by László Balázs and Zsolt Tyirityán split off to form Force and Determination, officially unveiling the movement and its symbols at a rally in the Budapest suburb of Vecsés on 8 July 2017, which the movement labeled the "unfurling the flag of the far right."[2] The movement was the merger of two smaller far-right groups, the Sixty-Four Counties Youth Movement and the Hungarian branch of the Identitarian movement.[1] Although the rally was poorly attended, with only 300 participants, Balázs stated "Tens of millions are added to the ranks of the Arabs, Africans and Gypsies who will show no tolerance once they realise the power that their demographic significance lends them," and that "Our ethnic community must come first... there is no equality" while Tyirityán stated "World history is made and lost on population, the fight for living space and the fight to hold on to living space," that "Anyone who says different is either delusional or lying. Any way you look at it, the strongest always wins" and that "I have race awareness. I am proud to be a white European... And I reserve the right to defend that." After his speech Tyirityán signed a copy of Mein Kampf for an attendee.[2]

2018 election

[edit]

The party sought to splinter the vote of Jobbik in the 2018 Hungarian parliamentary election, hoping to prevent Jobbik from winning any political victories. However, Cas Mudde, professor in the School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Georgia who specializes in far-right politics, correctly predicted that Force and Determination was a small regional block of dissatisfied Jobbik voters with no national presence, being isolated to the northern suburbs of Budapest, however, he stated that if these disparate regional blocks ran on a national platform, similar to what the Our Homeland Movement envisioned, that they might pose a serious threat to Jobbik and become a new rival to Fidesz.[7]

The 2018 election saw Jobbik win 2 more seats in the National Assembly, increasing their share to 26 seats in total with 19.06% of the vote and became the second largest party in Hungary. Meanwhile, Force and Determination did not even register a presence in the polls.[8][9]

Later history

[edit]

The party gained Hungarian media notability when Tamás Horváth, editor-in-chief of the pro-government news website Vasárnap.hu announced that he was close to the movement and was a former member and also a former Identitarian, resulting in criticism to both him and the overall reliability of the newspaper. He also held the microphone for Balázs during the founding rally in 2017.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e "A neonáci kötődésű Erő és Elszántság tüntetéseinek aktív részese volt a kormányközeli keresztény újság új főszerkesztője". 11 August 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e Dunai, Marton (2017-07-08). "Hungarian hard right launches new anti-liberal, racist movement". Reuters. Retrieved 2020-08-28.
  3. ^
  4. ^ "The Far-Right Hungarian Party Jobbik Is Moderating. Is That a Good Thing?". Freedom House. Retrieved 2017-10-24.
  5. ^ "Anti-Semitic Hungarian Party Embraces Israel and Jews". Haaretz. Reuters. 2017. Retrieved 2017-10-24.
  6. ^ "Gábor Vona on the wildling". Jobbik. 2015-04-24. Archived from the original on 2017-10-24. Retrieved 2017-10-24.
  7. ^ Strickland, Patrick. "How is Hungary's far right changing?". Al Jazeera English. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
  8. ^ "Térkép". index.hu.
  9. ^ "Országgyűlési képviselők választása 2018 - országos listás szavazás eredménye". valasztas.hu.