Analyse this: On 6 June, we will vote in the European elections. And on 1 July, Hungary will take over the rotating presidency of the Council of the EU, giving a big role to Prime Minister Viktor Orbán just when the top EU jobs for the next five years will be decided. Strange as it may seem, for the time being, Orbán seems to be trying to convey that the EU is not a priority for him and that his loyalties are elsewhere. He skipped an EU summit on Monday because he had better things to do: He attended the Belt and Road summit in China, where he had separate meetings with Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas was the only one among EU leaders to publicly react, calling Orbán’s handshake with Putin, a man wanted for war crimes by the International Criminal Court, “very, very unpleasant”. “How can you shake a criminal’s hand who has waged a war of aggression, especially coming from a country that has a history like Hungary has?” she wondered. As a journalist, I have also wondered why Orbán behaves as counter-current to the rest of the EU in such a steady and unwavering way. |