Dallas, Texas, is the perfect host city for the latest Conservative Political Action Conference, where Republican election deniers and democracy saboteurs of domestic and foreign provenance have gathered this week. Indeed in July, the Texas Republican Party, one of the most extreme in the nation, adopted a platform that rejects the certified results of the 2020 election, claims that President Joe Biden “was not legitimately elected” and refers to him as an “acting” president — an astonishingly subversive action that should have been front page news.
There is nothing democratic about Orban’s methods, which makes sense for such a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
No wonder two autocrats have star billing at this year’s conference: former election fraud architect President Donald Trump and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, whose system of “illiberal democracy” doesn’t even require free and fair elections.
In truth, there is nothing democratic about Orban’s methods, which makes sense for such a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Like the Republican Party, he rigs elections in technical ways, using gerrymandering to good effect. But he has also domesticated the media in ways the GOP can only dream about. In 2018, more than 470 Hungarian media outlets transferred their ownership rights to the mostly government-allied Central European Press and Media Foundation, giving Orban’s Fidesz party enviable influence over 80% of the press.
Orban is also a fan of the so-called culture wars now sweeping across America. He has been able to enact repressive laws against LGBTQ individuals on a national scale, from a 2020 measure that decreed the end of legal recognition of transgender and intersex people to a 2021 law that outlawed any depiction or discussion of LGBTQ identities and sexual orientations in schools, television, and advertising. The GOP has to be satisfied with state-level actions, like the so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bill that autocrat-in-training Ron DeSantis pushed through as governor of Florida.
All of this gives Orban cult status among some Republicans, who thirst to achieve his degree of control over the political system and make periodic pilgrimages to Budapest to see his autocracy in action. CPAC held a conference there in May.
The playbook is not incredibly difficult to follow. Orban knows that propaganda works through repetition. And his speech in Dallas echoed his CPAC Hungary message about the need for Hungary and America to be allies in the fight against liberal democracy. “Washington and Brussels will decide the battle for Western civilization. Today we hold neither of them,” he had asserted in May, placing the Biden White House and the E.U. in his sights. It’s time to take back institutions in Washington D.C. and Brussels, he said in Dallas, urging attendees to “coordinate the movement of our troops.”
Prime Minister Viktor Orban shares the importance of preserving freedom around the world. #CPAC pic.twitter.com/cypQT3in3Z








