BUDAPEST, Hungary — The real threat facing Hungary is not Russia but the European Union, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said in a speech to supporters on Saturday, as his nationalist party ramps up an anti-EU campaign ahead of national elections.
With only eight weeks until the April 12 vote, Orbán and his Fidesz party are facing their most serious challenge since the right-wing populist leader retook power in 2010.
Most independent polls show Fidesz trailing the center-right Tisza party and its leader, Péter Magyar, even as Orbán has campaigned on the unsubstantiated premise that the EU would send Hungarians to their deaths in neighboring Ukraine if his party loses.
In his speech on Saturday, Orbán compared the EU to the repressive Soviet regime that dominated Hungary for over 40 years last century, and dismissed the belief of many European leaders that Russian President Vladimir Putin poses a threat to the continent's security.
''We must get used to the idea that those who love freedom should not fear the East, but Brussels,'' he said, referring to the EU's de-facto capital in Belgium.
''Fear-mongering about Putin is primitive and unserious. Brussels, however, is a palpable reality and a source of imminent danger,'' he said ''This is the bitter truth, and we will not tolerate it.''
Orbán has been a firm opponent of military and financial aid for Kyiv since Russia launched its full-scale invasion nearly four years ago, and has maintained close relations with Moscow while adopting a combative posture toward Hungary's EU and NATO partners, which he portrays as warmongers.
In December, he said it was ''unclear who attacked whom'' when tens of thousands of Russian forces poured across Ukraine's borders in February 2022.