BUDAPEST, Hungary — Top officials of the European Union will boycott informal meetings hosted by Hungary while the country holds the EU's rotating presidency, after Hungary's pro-Russian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán held a series of rogue meetings with foreign leaders about Ukraine that angered his European partners.
The highly unusual decision to have the European Commission president and other top officials of the body boycott the meetings in Budapest was made ‘'in light of recent developments marking the start of the Hungarian (EU) presidency," commission spokesperson Eric Mamer posted Monday on X.
Hungary took over the six-month rotating role July 1, and since then Orbán has visited Ukraine, Russia, Azerbaijan, China, and the United States on a world tour he's touted as ''peace mission'' aimed at brokering an end to Russia's war in Ukraine.
That angered many leaders in the EU, who said they had not been informed in advance of Orbán's plans and rushed to emphasize that the nationalist leader was not acting on behalf of the bloc during his surprise meetings with Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping.
Hungary's European affairs minister, János Bóka, lashed out at the commission's decision, writing on X on Monday that the body ‘'cannot cherry pick institutions and member states it wants to cooperate with."
''Are all Commission decisions now based on political considerations?'' Bóka wrote.
A Hungarian government spokesperson, Zoltán Kovács, also suggested the decision was a product of political bias, writing on X: ''Sacrificing the institutional setup for private political purposes and disregarding (the Commission's) role for ideological and political motives.''
The decision by the European Commission applies to informal meetings hosted by Hungary, and means senior civil servants will attend instead of top officials like the European Commission president, currently Ursula von der Leyen.