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{{Infobox political party
{{Infobox political party
|name = Movement for a Better Hungary
| name = Movement for a Better Hungary
|logo = [[File:Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom.png|150px]]
| logo = [[File:Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom.png|150px]]
|colorcode = #000000
| colorcode = #000000
|leader = [[Gábor Vona]]
| leader = [[Gábor Vona]]
|chairman =
| chairman =
|secretary_general =
| secretary_general =
|foundation = 24 October 2003
| foundation = 24 October 2003
|ideology = {{nowrap|[[Hungarian nationalism]]<ref>{{Citation |title=Nationalist Jobbik Party Doubles Voter Base In Hungary |url=http://www.xpatloop.com/news/61800 |publisher=xpatloop.com |date=2009-06-25}}</ref><br />[[Hungarian irredentism]]<ref name="Zimberg 28–32">{{cite journal |first=Alexis |last=Zimberg |title=Nostalgia and Notions of False Empire: The (Un)historical Rise of the Right in Hungary |journal=The Hidden Transcript |issue=Spring 2013 |pages=28–32 |url=http://issuu.com/the_hidden_transcript/docs/ht4_print_070513_03 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref><br/>[[Hungarian Turanism]]<ref name=IBNTM>Ghosh, Palash (December 06 2013) "[http://www.ibtimes.com/strange-bedfellows-hungarian-far-right-jobbik-party-embraces-muslim-nations-seeks-eurasian-ideal Strange Bedfellows: Hungarian Far-Right Jobbik Party Embraces Muslim Nations, Seeks 'Eurasian' Ideal Of Statehood]" ''International Business Times''. Retrieved August 31, 2014</ref><ref name="budapesttimes.hu">Ungváry, Krisztián (5. February 2012) "[http://budapesttimes.hu/2012/02/05/turanism-the-new-ideology-of-the-far-right/ Turanism: the 'new' ideology of the far right]" BZT Media Kft. Retrieved August 31, 2014</ref><br>[[National conservatism]]<ref>{{Cite book|title=Radical Right Parties in Central and Eastern Europe: Mainstream Party Competition and Electoral Fortune|page=36|first=Bartek|last=Pytlas|year=2015|publisher=[[Routledge]]}}</ref><br>[[Social conservatism]]<ref>http://hungarianspectrum.org/2015/05/24/fidesz-versus-jobbik-not-much-difference/</ref><br>[[Right-wing populism]]<ref>{{Cite book|title=Populist Political Communication in Europe|page=375|publisher=[[Routledge]]|year=2016|first=Toril|last=Aalberg}}</ref><br>[[Economic nationalism]]<ref>{{cite news|date=3 April 2014|work=[[Israel National News]]|title=Hungary's Rebranded Far-Right Eyes Election Success|url=http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/179224}}</ref><br>[[Euroscepticism#Hard Euroscepticism|Hard Euroscepticism]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.politics.hu/20121206/survey-finds-lmp-most-eu-friendly-hungarian-party-jobbik-most-hostile/|title=Survey finds LMP most "EU friendly" Hungarian party; Jobbik most hostile|work=Politics.hu|accessdate=14 February 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://visegradinsight.eu/euroscepticism-and-the-emergence-of-east-central-europes-far-right27052014/|title=Euroscepticism and the emergence of East-Central Europe’s far-right - Visegrad Insight|publisher=|accessdate=14 February 2015}}</ref><ref>http://jobbik.com/jobbik_takes_first_step_to_change_eu</ref><br>[[Anti-globalization movement|Anti-globalism]]<ref>{{Citation | title = A Jobbik szembefordul a globális kapitalizmussal | url = http://mandiner.hu/cikk/20131026_a_jobbik_szembefordul_a_globalis_kapitalizmussal | publisher = mandiner.hu | date = 2013-10-26}}</ref><ref>{{Citation | title = Vona megmondta: befellegzett a globális kapitalizmusnak | url = http://nol.hu/belfold/vona_megmondta__befellegzett_a_globalis_kapitalizmusnak | publisher = nol.hu | date = 2013-01-26}}</ref>}}
| ideology = {{nowrap|[[Hungarian nationalism]]<ref>{{Citation |title=Nationalist Jobbik Party Doubles Voter Base In Hungary |url=http://www.xpatloop.com/news/61800 |publisher=xpatloop.com |date=2009-06-25}}</ref><br />[[Hungarian Turanism]]<ref name=IBNTM>Ghosh, Palash (December 06 2013) "[http://www.ibtimes.com/strange-bedfellows-hungarian-far-right-jobbik-party-embraces-muslim-nations-seeks-eurasian-ideal Strange Bedfellows: Hungarian Far-Right Jobbik Party Embraces Muslim Nations, Seeks 'Eurasian' Ideal Of Statehood]" ''International Business Times''. Retrieved August 31, 2014</ref><ref name="budapesttimes.hu">Ungváry, Krisztián (5. February 2012) "[http://budapesttimes.hu/2012/02/05/turanism-the-new-ideology-of-the-far-right/ Turanism: the 'new' ideology of the far right]" BZT Media Kft. Retrieved August 31, 2014</ref><br>[[National conservatism]]<ref>{{Cite book|title=Radical Right Parties in Central and Eastern Europe: Mainstream Party Competition and Electoral Fortune|page=36|first=Bartek|last=Pytlas|year=2015|publisher=[[Routledge]]}}</ref><br>[[Social conservatism]]<ref>http://hungarianspectrum.org/2015/05/24/fidesz-versus-jobbik-not-much-difference/</ref><br>[[Right-wing populism]]<ref>{{Cite book|title=Populist Political Communication in Europe|page=375|publisher=[[Routledge]]|year=2016|first=Toril|last=Aalberg}}</ref><br>[[Economic nationalism]]<ref>{{cite news|date=3 April 2014|work=[[Israel National News]]|title=Hungary's Rebranded Far-Right Eyes Election Success|url=http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/179224}}</ref><br>[[Soft Euroscepticism]]<ref>https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hungary-jobbik-eu/hungarys-jobbik-supports-eu-deepening-with-voters-blessing-idUSKBN1CW1TR</ref><br>[[Anti-globalization movement|Anti-globalism]]<ref>{{Citation | title = A Jobbik szembefordul a globális kapitalizmussal | url = http://mandiner.hu/cikk/20131026_a_jobbik_szembefordul_a_globalis_kapitalizmussal | publisher = mandiner.hu | date = 2013-10-26}}</ref><ref>{{Citation | title = Vona megmondta: befellegzett a globális kapitalizmusnak | url = http://nol.hu/belfold/vona_megmondta__befellegzett_a_globalis_kapitalizmusnak | publisher = nol.hu | date = 2013-01-26}}</ref>}}
|headquarters = 1113 [[Budapest]], Villányi út 20/A
| headquarters = 1113 [[Budapest]], Villányi út 20/A
|international = ''None''
| international = ''None''
|website = [http://www.jobbik.hu/ www.jobbik.hu ''(Hungarian)'']<br />[http://www.jobbik.com/ www.jobbik.com ''(English)'']
| website = [http://www.jobbik.hu/ www.jobbik.hu ''(Hungarian)'']<br />[http://www.jobbik.com/ www.jobbik.com ''(English)'']
|country = Hungary
| country = Hungary
| leader2_title = Parliamentary leader
| leader2_title = Parliamentary leader
| leader2_name = [[János Volner]]
| leader2_name = [[János Volner]]
| leader3_title = Vice Presidents
| leader3_title = Vice Presidents
| leader3_name = [[Erik Fülöp]]<br>[[Dávid Janiczak]]<br>[[Tamás Sneider]]<br>[[László Toroczkai]]<br>[[János Volner]]<br>[[Dániel Z. Kárpát]]
| leader3_name = [[Erik Fülöp]]<br>[[Dávid Janiczak]]<br>[[Tamás Sneider]]<br>[[László Toroczkai]]<br>[[János Volner]]<br>[[Dániel Z. Kárpát]]
|native_name = Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom
| native_name = Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom
|leader1_title =
| leader1_title =
|leader1_name =
| leader1_name =
| wing1_title = [[Paramilitary|Paramilitary wing]]
| wing1_title = [[Paramilitary|Paramilitary wing]]
| wing1 = [[Magyar Gárda]]<ref>Tove H. Malloy, Joseph Marko.. Minority Governance in and beyond Europe: Celebrating 10 Years of the European Yearbook of Minority Issues. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2014. p. 208.</ref><ref>Peter Parycek. CeDEM 12 Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government 3–4 May 2012 Danube-University Krems, Austria. 2012. p. 233.</ref><ref>William M. Downs. Political Extremism in Democracies: Combating Intolerance. Palgrave Macmillan. 2012. p. 191.</ref><ref>Charles Asher Small. Global Antisemitism: A Crisis of Modernity. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. 2013. p. 226</ref><br /><small>(2007–2009)</small>
| wing1 = [[Magyar Gárda]]<ref>Tove H. Malloy, Joseph Marko.. Minority Governance in and beyond Europe: Celebrating 10 Years of the European Yearbook of Minority Issues. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2014. p. 208.</ref><ref>Peter Parycek. CeDEM 12 Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government 3–4 May 2012 Danube-University Krems, Austria. 2012. p. 233.</ref><ref>William M. Downs. Political Extremism in Democracies: Combating Intolerance. Palgrave Macmillan. 2012. p. 191.</ref><ref>Charles Asher Small. Global Antisemitism: A Crisis of Modernity. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. 2013. p. 226</ref><br /><small>(2007–2009)</small>
|dissolution =
| dissolution =
|position = [[Far-right politics|Far-right]]<ref name="Huggan_Law">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iCnhKaE5_G8C&pg=PA203&dq=extremist+jobbik&hl=en&ei=TQuDTc6wG4_-4Aao6NXSCA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CCoQ6AEwATgK#v=onepage&q=jobbik&f=false |first1=Graham |last1=Huggan |first2=Ian |last2=Law |title=Racism Postcolonialism Europe |publisher=Liverpool University Press |year=2009}}</ref><ref name="SchoriLiang">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jXR5GzqvmyYC&pg=PA179&dq=far-right++jobbik&hl=en&ei=-guDTeCyA8a84gbz6MXiCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CCsQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=far-right%20%20jobbik&f=false |first=Christina |last=Schori Liang |title=Europe for the Europeans: The Foreign and Security Policy of the Populist Radical Right |publisher=Ashgate |year=2007}}</ref><ref name="Kirton_Greene">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mQTjdAIX6f4C&pg=PA267&dq=far-right++jobbik&hl=en&ei=Ww2DTZLJM4Lc4gbWkOn3CA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CEUQ6AEwBzgK#v=onepage&q=far-right%20%20jobbik&f=false |first1=Gill |last1=Kirton |first2=Anne-Marie |last2=Greene |title=The Dynamics of Managing Diversity: A Critical Approach |edition=3rd |publisher=Butterworth-Heinemann |year=2010}}</ref>
| position = [[Right-wing_politics|Right-wing]]<ref name="Is Hungary's Jobbik leader really ditching far-right past?">{{cite |url=http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-37976687 |title= Is Hungary's Jobbik leader really ditching far-right past?}}</ref><ref name="The Far-Right Hungarian Party Jobbik Is Moderating. Is That a Good Thing?">{{cite |url= https://freedomhouse.org/blog/far-right-hungarian-party-jobbik-moderating-good-thing |title= The Far-Right Hungarian Party Jobbik Is Moderating. Is That a Good Thing?}}</ref> <br> to [[Far-right politics|far-right]]<ref name="Huggan_Law">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iCnhKaE5_G8C&pg=PA203&dq=extremist+jobbik&hl=en&ei=TQuDTc6wG4_-4Aao6NXSCA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CCoQ6AEwATgK#v=onepage&q=jobbik&f=false |first1=Graham |last1=Huggan |first2=Ian |last2=Law |title=Racism Postcolonialism Europe |publisher=Liverpool University Press |year=2009}}</ref><ref name="SchoriLiang">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jXR5GzqvmyYC&pg=PA179&dq=far-right++jobbik&hl=en&ei=-guDTeCyA8a84gbz6MXiCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CCsQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=far-right%20%20jobbik&f=false |first=Christina |last=Schori Liang |title=Europe for the Europeans: The Foreign and Security Policy of the Populist Radical Right |publisher=Ashgate |year=2007}}</ref><ref name="Kirton_Greene">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mQTjdAIX6f4C&pg=PA267&dq=far-right++jobbik&hl=en&ei=Ww2DTZLJM4Lc4gbWkOn3CA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CEUQ6AEwBzgK#v=onepage&q=far-right%20%20jobbik&f=false |first1=Gill |last1=Kirton |first2=Anne-Marie |last2=Greene |title=The Dynamics of Managing Diversity: A Critical Approach |edition=3rd |publisher=Butterworth-Heinemann |year=2010}}</ref>
|european = [[Alliance of European National Movements]]
| european = none
|europarl = ''[[Non-Inscrits]]''
| europarl = ''[[Non-Inscrits]]''
|colours = [[Red]] and [[Silver (color)|silver]]
| colours = Red, white and green
|flag = [[File:Flag of Jobbik (Hungary).svg|140px]]
| seats1_title = [[National Assembly of Hungary|National Assembly]]
| seats1 = {{Composition bar|24|199|hex=#000000}}
|seats1_title = [[National Assembly of Hungary|National Assembly]]
| seats2_title = [[European Parliament]]
|seats1 = {{Composition bar|24|199|hex=#000000}}
| seats2 = {{Composition bar|3|21|hex=#000000}}
|seats2_title = [[European Parliament]]
| seats3_title = [[Counties of Hungary|County Assemblies]]
|seats2 = {{Composition bar|3|21|hex=#000000}}
| seats3 = {{Composition bar|81|419|hex=#000000}}
|seats3_title = [[Counties of Hungary|County Assemblies]]
|seats3 = {{Composition bar|81|419|hex=#000000}}
| youth_wing = [[Jobbik Young Section]]
| youth_wing = [[Jobbik Young Section]]
| membership = 17,927 (2016)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://nol.hu/belfold/kezd-osszeesett-az-mszp-a-part-hallgat-a-tagletszamrol-1625233 |title=Kezd összeesni az MSZP, a párt inkább hallgat a taglétszámról |publisher=nol.hu |date=2016-07-27 |accessdate=2016-10-05}}</ref>
| membership = 17,927 (2016)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://nol.hu/belfold/kezd-osszeesett-az-mszp-a-part-hallgat-a-tagletszamrol-1625233 |title=Kezd összeesni az MSZP, a párt inkább hallgat a taglétszámról |publisher=nol.hu |date=2016-07-27 |accessdate=2016-10-05}}</ref>
}}
}}
'''Jobbik, the Movement for a Better Hungary''' ({{lang-hu|Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom}}), commonly known as '''Jobbik''' ({{IPA-hu|ˈjobːik|pron}}), is a Hungarian conservative party<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hungary-jobbik/hungarys-jobbik-ditches-far-right-past-to-challenge-orban-in-2018-idUSKBN14V1PW |title= Hungary's Jobbik ditches far-right past to challenge Orban in 2018 |date=Jan 11, 2017 |work= Reuters |access-date= 2017-10-18}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://jobbik.com/manifesto_on_the_guidelines_for_a_future_jobbik_led_government|title=Manifesto on the guidelines for a future Jobbik-led government|date=2017-10-04|work=jobbik.com|access-date=2017-10-18|language=en}}</ref> with [[Political radicalism|radical]] and [[Hungarian nationalism|nationalist]]<ref name="Politics_Agreement">{{Citation | url=http://www.politics.hu/20091026/jobbik-signs-agreements-with-other-european-nationalist-groups | title=Jobbik signs agreements with other European nationalist groups | date=2009-10-26 | publisher=[[Magyar Távirati Iroda|MTI]] | quote=Hungary's radical nationalist Jobbik party signed an agreement with four international parties to set up the Alliance of European Nationalist Movements, Jobbik deputy leader Andras Balczo said on Saturday.}}</ref><ref name="BudaTimes">{{Citation | url=http://www.budapesttimes.hu/content/view/12240/219/ | title=Radical nationalist Jobbik for toppling Trianon borders, says MEP | date=2009-06-14 | publisher=[[The Budapest Times]] | quote=Hungary's radical nationalist Jobbik party plans to fight for the toppling of borders set by the 1920 Trianon treaty, newly elected MEP Csanad Szegedi said at the memorial meeting.}}</ref> roots. At its beginnings the party described itself as "a principled, conservative and radically patriotic Christian party", whose "fundamental purpose" is the protection of "Hungarian values and interests."<ref name="politics.hu">{{cite web |title=Jobbik confident of winning EP seat, party leader says |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090513/jobbik-confident-of-winning-ep-seat-party-leader-says |publisher=politics.hu (source: [[Magyar Távirati Iroda|MTI]]) |date=2009-05-13 |quote=Jobbik describes itself as “a principled, conservative and radically patriotic Christian party. Its fundamental purpose is protecting Hungarian values and interests.”}}</ref> By contrast, due to their earlier anti-establishment stance, the party has been described by others{{Who|date=August 2017}} as an "[[Antisemitism|antisemitic]] organization".<ref name="Indy">{{cite news|last1=Paterson|first1=Tony|title=Hungary election: Concerns as neo-Nazi Jobbik party wins 20% of vote|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/concerns-as-neo-nazi-jobbik-party-wins-20-of-hungary-vote-9244541.html|accessdate=18 February 2017|work=The Independent (UK)|date=7 April 2014}}</ref>
<!--Please consult and contribute to the discussion on the Talk Page concerning this Lead at (2.4.1) before considering altering or editing the text below-->

'''Jobbik, the Movement for a Better Hungary''' ({{lang-hu|Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom}}), commonly known as '''Jobbik''' ({{IPA-hu|ˈjobːik|pron}}), is a Hungarian [[Political radicalism|radical]] [[Hungarian nationalism|nationalist]]<ref name="Politics_Agreement">{{Citation | url=http://www.politics.hu/20091026/jobbik-signs-agreements-with-other-european-nationalist-groups | title=Jobbik signs agreements with other European nationalist groups | date=2009-10-26 | publisher=[[Magyar Távirati Iroda|MTI]] | quote=Hungary's radical nationalist Jobbik party signed an agreement with four international parties to set up the Alliance of European Nationalist Movements, Jobbik deputy leader Andras Balczo said on Saturday.}}</ref><ref name="BudaTimes">{{Citation | url=http://www.budapesttimes.hu/content/view/12240/219/ | title=Radical nationalist Jobbik for toppling Trianon borders, says MEP | date=2009-06-14 | publisher=[[The Budapest Times]] | quote=Hungary's radical nationalist Jobbik party plans to fight for the toppling of borders set by the 1920 Trianon treaty, newly elected MEP Csanad Szegedi said at the memorial meeting.}}</ref> political party. The party describes itself as "a principled, conservative and radically patriotic Christian party", whose "fundamental purpose" is the protection of "Hungarian values and interests."<ref name="politics.hu">{{cite web |title=Jobbik confident of winning EP seat, party leader says |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090513/jobbik-confident-of-winning-ep-seat-party-leader-says |publisher=politics.hu (source: [[Magyar Távirati Iroda|MTI]]) |date=2009-05-13 |quote=Jobbik describes itself as “a principled, conservative and radically patriotic Christian party. Its fundamental purpose is protecting Hungarian values and interests.”}}</ref> By contrast, the party has been described by others{{Who|date=August 2017}} as "neo-Nazi" and an "[[Antisemitism|antisemitic]] organization".<ref name="Indy">{{cite news|last1=Paterson|first1=Tony|title=Hungary election: Concerns as neo-Nazi Jobbik party wins 20% of vote|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/concerns-as-neo-nazi-jobbik-party-wins-20-of-hungary-vote-9244541.html|accessdate=18 February 2017|work=The Independent (UK)|date=7 April 2014}}</ref> After the [[Hungarian parliamentary election, 2014|Hungarian parliamentary elections on 6 April 2014]], the party polled 1,020,476 votes, securing 20.54% of the total, making them Hungary's third largest party in the [[National Assembly (Hungary)|National Assembly]].
Since 2014 Jobbik, with regard to its growing popularity, has started to re-define itself as a [[Conservatism|conservative]] people's party and changed the controversial elements of its communication. According to the party's Manifesto on the guidelines of a future government, Jobbik represents all Hungarian citizens and people and aims to build a modern national identity, while rejecting the [[chauvinism]] of the [[20th century]].

After the [[Hungarian parliamentary election, 2014|Hungarian parliamentary elections on 6 April 2014]], the party polled 1,020,476 votes, securing 20.54% of the total, making them Hungary's third largest party in the [[National Assembly (Hungary)|National Assembly]].


==Name==
==Name==
Line 43: Line 45:


==Platform and ideology==
==Platform and ideology==
Currently, the party describes itself as a modern conservative people's party.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://jobbik.com/manifesto_on_the_guidelines_for_a_future_jobbik_led_government|title=Manifesto on the guidelines for a future Jobbik-led government|date=2017-10-04|work=jobbik.com|access-date=2017-10-18|language=en}}</ref>
The party describes itself as "a principled, conservative and radically patriotic Christian party", whose "fundamental purpose" is the protection of "Hungarian values and interests".<ref name="politics.hu" /> Jobbik's ideology has been described by political scholars as [[Right-wing populism|right-wing populist]], whose strategy "relies on a combination of [[Ethnic nationalism|ethno-nationalism]] with [[Populism|anti-elitist populist]] rhetoric and a radical critique of existing political institutions".<ref>{{cite book |last=Betz |first=Hans-Georg |title=Radical Right-Wing Populism in Western Europe (The New Politics of Resentment) |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LwTTwbtNyxUC&dq=Explaining+the+Emergence+of+Radical+Right-Wing+Populist+Parties:&lr=&source=gbs_navlinks_s |publisher=[[Palgrave MacMillan]] |year=1994 |isbn=0-312-08390-4 |page=4 |quote=the majority of radical right-wing populist parties are radical in their rejection of the established socio-cultural and socio-political system}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Albertazzi |first=Daniele |title=Radical Twenty-First Century Populism: The Spectre of Western European Democracy |publisher=Palgrave MacMillan |year=2007 |isbn=0-230-01349-X}}</ref>

For its part, Jobbik rejects the common classification of the political spectrum in [[Left–right politics|left and right]]. It prefers a distinction of political parties based on their stance towards globalisation. On this scheme, the party sees itself as patriotic.<ref>{{cite web|author=Leigh Phillips |url=http://euobserver.com/843/29866 |title=EUobserver / A far-right for the Facebook generation: The rise and rise of Jobbik |publisher=Euobserver.com |date=2010-04-19 |accessdate=2010-06-18}}</ref> The party also rejects the term 'far-right', and instead labels itself as '[[Radical right (Europe)|radical right-wing]]'. It has also criticised media companies for labelling them as 'far-right' and has threatened to take action towards those who do.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://alfahir.hu/nem_nevezhetik_szelsojobboldalinak_a_jobbikot_a_hirmusorok |title=Nem nevezhetik szélsőjobboldalinak a Jobbikot a hírműsorok |publisher=alfahir.hu |date= |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> In 2014, the [[Supreme Court of Hungary]] ruled that Jobbik cannot be labeled "far-right" in any domestic radio or television transmissions, as this would constitute an opinion because Jobbik has refuted the 'far-right' label.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Zalan|first1=Estzer|title=Court rules Jobbik cannot be called 'far-right'|url=http://euobserver.com/eu-elections/124509|publisher=EUobserver|accessdate=6 June 2014}}</ref>
Earlier, the party often defined itself as "a principled, conservative and radically patriotic Christian party", whose "fundamental purpose" was the protection of "Hungarian values and interests".<ref name="politics.hu" /> Since then, Jobbik has implemented major changes in its program and policies, due to its growing popularity and broadening supporter groups. Earlier Jobbik's ideology has been described by political scholars as [[Right-wing populism|right-wing populist]], whose strategy "relies on a combination of [[Ethnic nationalism|ethno-nationalism]] with [[Populism|anti-elitist populist]] rhetoric and a radical critique of existing political institutions".<ref>{{cite book |last=Betz |first=Hans-Georg |title=Radical Right-Wing Populism in Western Europe (The New Politics of Resentment) |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LwTTwbtNyxUC&dq=Explaining+the+Emergence+of+Radical+Right-Wing+Populist+Parties:&lr=&source=gbs_navlinks_s |publisher=[[Palgrave MacMillan]] |year=1994 |isbn=0-312-08390-4 |page=4 |quote=the majority of radical right-wing populist parties are radical in their rejection of the established socio-cultural and socio-political system}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Albertazzi |first=Daniele |title=Radical Twenty-First Century Populism: The Spectre of Western European Democracy |publisher=Palgrave MacMillan |year=2007 |isbn=0-230-01349-X}}</ref>
For its part, Jobbik rejects the common classification of the political spectrum in [[Left–right politics|left and right]]. The party sees itself as patriotic.<ref>{{cite web|author=Leigh Phillips |url=http://euobserver.com/843/29866 |title=EUobserver / A far-right for the Facebook generation: The rise and rise of Jobbik |publisher=Euobserver.com |date=2010-04-19 |accessdate=2010-06-18}}</ref> The party has always rejected the term 'far-right', and instead labeled itself as '[[Radical right (Europe)|radical right-wing]]'. It has also criticised media companies for labelling them as 'far-right' and has threatened to take action towards those who do.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://alfahir.hu/nem_nevezhetik_szelsojobboldalinak_a_jobbikot_a_hirmusorok |title=Nem nevezhetik szélsőjobboldalinak a Jobbikot a hírműsorok |publisher=alfahir.hu |date= |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> In 2014, the [[Supreme Court of Hungary]] ruled that Jobbik cannot be labeled "far-right" in any domestic radio or television transmissions, as this would constitute an opinion because Jobbik has refuted the 'far-right' label.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Zalan|first1=Estzer|title=Court rules Jobbik cannot be called 'far-right'|url=http://euobserver.com/eu-elections/124509|publisher=EUobserver|accessdate=6 June 2014}}</ref>

Since 2014 the party has not used the "radical right-wing" term to define itself, stating that Jobbik aims to represent all Hungarian people, not exclusively the right-wing of the political spectrum.

At its beginnings, Jobbik described itself as rejecting "global [[capitalism]]"<ref>{{Citation |title=A Jobbik szembefordul a globális kapitalizmussal |url=http://mandiner.hu/cikk/20131026_a_jobbik_szembefordul_a_globalis_kapitalizmussal |publisher=mandiner.hu |date=2013-10-26}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |title=Vona megmondta: befellegzett a globális kapitalizmusnak |url=http://nol.hu/belfold/vona_megmondta__befellegzett_a_globalis_kapitalizmusnak |publisher=nol.hu |date=2013-01-26}}</ref> and European Union, because they felt disappointed with the conditions of the Hungarian EU accession.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://visegradinsight.eu/euroscepticism-and-the-emergence-of-east-central-europes-far-right27052014/ |title=Euroscepticism and the emergence of East-Central Europe’s far-right |first=Filip |last=Mazurczak |work=Visegrad Insight |date=27 May 2014 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref> While the party previously also opposed [[Zionism]],<ref>{{Citation |title=Jobbik "anti-Zionist" demo goes ahead in Budapest |url=http://www.politics.hu/20130505/jobbik-anti-zionist-demo-goes-ahead-in-budapest/ |publisher=politics.hu |date=2013-05-05}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |title=Hungary's Jobbik party hold anti-semitic rally in Budapest after ban attempts fail |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/hungary/10037377/Hungarys-Jobbik-party-hold-anti-semitic-rally-in-Budapest-after-ban-attempts-fail.html |work=Telegraph |date=2013-05-04}}</ref> the party's leader, Gabor Vona, stated in February 2017 that he has "never questioned Israel’s existence"<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://forward.com/news/world/362663/exclusive-in-first-talk-with-jewish-media-hungarys-far-right-leader-strikes/|title=Exclusive: In First Talk With Jewish Media, Hungary’s Far Right Leader Strikes A New Pose|work=The Forward|access-date=2017-10-18}}</ref> and that the party supports a [[two-state solution]] to the [[Israel-Palestine conflict]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://forward.com/news/world/362663/exclusive-in-first-talk-with-jewish-media-hungarys-far-right-leader-strikes/|work=[[The Forward]]|title=Exclusive: In First Talk With Jewish Media, Hungary’s Far Right Leader Strikes A New Pose|date=8 February 2017|accessdate=17 July 2017}}</ref> At some point the party adheres to [[Hungarian Turanism|Pan-Turanism]], an ideology that asserts that [[Hungarians]] originate from the [[Turanism|Ural–Altaic race]].<ref name="IBNTM">Ghosh, Palash (December 06 2013) "[http://www.ibtimes.com/strange-bedfellows-hungarian-far-right-jobbik-party-embraces-muslim-nations-seeks-eurasian-ideal Strange Bedfellows: Hungarian Far-Right Jobbik Party Embraces Muslim Nations, Seeks 'Eurasian' Ideal Of Statehood]" ''International Business Times''. Retrieved August 31, 2014</ref><ref name="budapesttimes.hu">Ungváry, Krisztián (5. February 2012) "[http://budapesttimes.hu/2012/02/05/turanism-the-new-ideology-of-the-far-right/ Turanism: the 'new' ideology of the far right]" BZT Media Kft. Retrieved August 31, 2014</ref>

According to Gábor Vona, the president of Jobbik, after 2014 the party has grown out of its "[[adolescence]]" and reached its [[adulthood]]. Since then Jobbik defines itself as a national people's party and has significantly changed its views on the [[European Union]], while in the internal politics the party has started to emphasize the opening towards the different groups of the [[Society|Hungarian society]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.diplomatamagazin.hu/ftp/s9eranm_3-5_(2).pdf|title=Diplomata Magazin|last=Fodros|first=István|date=|website=www.diplomatamagazin.hu|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=18 October 2017}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://hungarytoday.hu/news/hungarian-far-right-jobbik-party-holds-year-opening-conference-28046|title=Hungarian Far-Right Jobbik Party Holds Year-Opening Conference - Hungary Today|work=Hungary Today|access-date=2017-10-18|language=en-US}}</ref> At the same time Gábor Vona took responsibility for the earlier, misunderstandable remarks of the party and offered apology for those who were unintentionally offended by previous statements.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.budapost.eu/2017/08/jobbik-leader-ready-to-apologize-to-jews-and-roma/|title=Budapost » Jobbik leader ready to apologize to Jews and Roma|website=www.budapost.eu|access-date=2017-10-18}}</ref>

Jobbik, according to the recent remarks from the party, does not regard ideological issues as a primary goal anymore but puts focus on the elimination of social tensions and controversies as well as on the fight against the growing corruption in the public sphere and administration.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://hungarytoday.hu/news/hungarian-far-right-jobbik-party-holds-year-opening-conference-28046|title=Hungarian Far-Right Jobbik Party Holds Year-Opening Conference - Hungary Today|work=Hungary Today|access-date=2017-10-18|language=en-US}}</ref>

=== Modern conservativism ===
In summer of 2016 Gábor Vona, the president of Jobbik, declared a new style of politics, called "modern conservativism" with the aim to exceed the pointless debates between the right- and the left-wing and to induct [[cooperation]] among Hungarians with different political backgrounds. According to Vona, the goal of "modern conservativism" is, beyond politics, to build a society that can, by its [[proactivity]], be a basis for a more [[Democracy|democratic]] political functioning. As a historical precedent, he referred to the ideals of [[István Széchenyi]], who is considered as one of the greatest [[Statesman|statesmen]] of the Hungarian history.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://alfahir.hu/elarulta_hosszu_tavu_celjait_vona_gabor_a_titkos_ertelmisegi_talalkozon|title=Elárulta hosszú távú céljait Vona Gábor a titkos értelmiségi találkozón|date=2016-08-29|work=Alfahír|access-date=2017-10-20|language=hu}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hungary-jobbik/hungarys-jobbik-ditches-far-right-past-to-challenge-orban-in-2018-idUSKBN14V1PW |title= Hungary's Jobbik ditches far-right past to challenge Orban in 2018 |date= Jan 11, 2017 |work= Reuters |access-date= 2017-10-20}}</ref>

=== Relation to the European Union ===
Since its formation, Jobbik had a strongly critical stance towards the European Union. The party regarded the accession of Hungary a failure, and looked on the EU as an organization that did not serve the interests of the Hungarians. However, even in this period, the party did not refused the idea of a radically reformed European [[confederation]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.jobbik.com/sites/default/files/Jobbik-RADICALCHANGE2010.pdf|title=Radical change - Jobbik's electoral manifesto 2010|last=|first=|date=|website=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=}}</ref> After the [[Brexit]] and the continuous debates on the future of the European Union, the party has reassessed its views on the EU and started to emphasize that by adequate policies a reform of the EU, that could make the organization advantageous for the European nations, is possible.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.politico.eu/article/hungarys-far-right-jobbik-leader-gabor-vonasays-leaving-eu-no-longer-on-the-agenda/|title=Hungary’s far-right Jobbik says leaving EU no longer on the agenda|date=2016-06-03|work=POLITICO|access-date=2017-10-20|language=en-US}}</ref> According to Jobbik, Hungary should join the [[Eurozone]] as soon as possible since it is a not a political but an economic question. On his press conference on 27 November 2017 the president of the party, Gábor Vona told, if some conditions were fulfilled Jobbik could even support further deepening of the EU.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hungary-jobbik-eu/hungarys-jobbik-supports-eu-deepening-with-voters-blessing-idUSKBN1CW1TR|title=Hungary's Jobbik supports EU deepening with voters' blessing|date=Fri Oct 27 13:12:13 UTC 2017|work=Reuters|access-date=2017-10-31}}</ref>

=== Wage Union ===
''Main article: [[Wage union|Wage Union]]''


Jobbik considers the issue of decreasing the differences between the regions of the EU especially important. Thus, they party sees a strong convergence of the countries as an important goal.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://dailynewshungary.com/jobbik-mp-marton-gyongyosi-launching-wage-union-initiative-leave-disastrous-policy-past-27-years-behind/|title=Jobbik MP Márton Gyöngyösi: By launching the wage union initiative, we leave the disastrous policy of the past 27 years behind - Daily News Hungary|date=2017-08-22|work=Daily News Hungary|access-date=2017-10-24|language=en-US}}</ref> Reducing the economic differences between the Western and the Eastern part of the European Union and the development of the Eastern regions are key elements of the new EU-policy of Jobbik. According to the party, for the lack of development [[Central and Eastern Europe|Eastern Central Europe]]<nowiki/>an governments and the European Union, that has turned a blind eye on corruption, are equally responsible. Therefore Jobbik played a leading role in the formation of the Wage Union [[European Citizens' Initiative]], that started its work on 14 March 2017 with the participation of representatives from 8 Central European countries.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wageunion.eu/en/who-we-are|title=Who we are|last=www.wageunion.eu|website=www.wageunion.eu|language=en|access-date=2017-10-24}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.politics.hu/20170523/jobbik-calls-on-govt-to-back-european-wage-union-initiative/|title=Jobbik calls on gov’t to back European wage union initiative|work=Politics.hu|access-date=2017-10-24|language=en-US}}</ref>
Jobbik describes itself as rejecting "global [[capitalism]]"<ref>{{Citation |title=A Jobbik szembefordul a globális kapitalizmussal |url=http://mandiner.hu/cikk/20131026_a_jobbik_szembefordul_a_globalis_kapitalizmussal |publisher=mandiner.hu |date=2013-10-26}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |title=Vona megmondta: befellegzett a globális kapitalizmusnak |url=http://nol.hu/belfold/vona_megmondta__befellegzett_a_globalis_kapitalizmusnak |publisher=nol.hu |date=2013-01-26}}</ref> and European integration.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://visegradinsight.eu/euroscepticism-and-the-emergence-of-east-central-europes-far-right27052014/ |title=Euroscepticism and the emergence of East-Central Europe’s far-right |first=Filip |last=Mazurczak |work=Visegrad Insight |date=27 May 2014 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref> While the party previously also opposed [[Zionism]],<ref>{{Citation |title=Jobbik "anti-Zionist" demo goes ahead in Budapest |url=http://www.politics.hu/20130505/jobbik-anti-zionist-demo-goes-ahead-in-budapest/ |publisher=politics.hu |date=2013-05-05}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |title=Hungary's Jobbik party hold anti-semitic rally in Budapest after ban attempts fail |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/hungary/10037377/Hungarys-Jobbik-party-hold-anti-semitic-rally-in-Budapest-after-ban-attempts-fail.html |work=Telegraph |date=2013-05-04}}</ref> the party's leader, Gabor Vona, stated in February 2017 that he has "never questioned Israel’s existence" and that the party supports a [[two-state solution]] to the [[Israel-Palestine conflict]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://forward.com/news/world/362663/exclusive-in-first-talk-with-jewish-media-hungarys-far-right-leader-strikes/|work=[[The Forward]]|title=Exclusive: In First Talk With Jewish Media, Hungary’s Far Right Leader Strikes A New Pose|date=8 February 2017|accessdate=17 July 2017}}</ref> The party adheres to [[Hungarian Turanism|Pan-Turanism]], an ideology that asserts that [[Hungarians]] originate from the [[Turanism|Ural–Altaic race]].<ref name=IBNTM>Ghosh, Palash (December 06 2013) "[http://www.ibtimes.com/strange-bedfellows-hungarian-far-right-jobbik-party-embraces-muslim-nations-seeks-eurasian-ideal Strange Bedfellows: Hungarian Far-Right Jobbik Party Embraces Muslim Nations, Seeks 'Eurasian' Ideal Of Statehood]" ''International Business Times''. Retrieved August 31, 2014</ref><ref name="budapesttimes.hu">Ungváry, Krisztián (5. February 2012) "[http://budapesttimes.hu/2012/02/05/turanism-the-new-ideology-of-the-far-right/ Turanism: the 'new' ideology of the far right]" BZT Media Kft. Retrieved August 31, 2014</ref> The movement is described by some scholars{{Who|date=August 2017}} and media outlets{{Who|date=August 2017}} as "[[Fascism|fascist]]",<ref name="Times">{{cite news |first=Adam |last=LeBor |title=Jobbik: Meet the BNP's fascist friends in Hungary |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article6457752.ece |publisher=[[The Times Online]] |date=2009-06-09 |accessdate=2009-07-05 |location=London}}</ref> "[[Neo-fascism|neo-fascist]]",<ref>[[Noam Chomsky|Chomsky, Noam]] (2011-04-21) [http://www.salon.com/news/politics/war_room/2011/04/21/global_empire_united_states_iraq_noam_chomsky Is the world too big to fail?], ''[[Salon.com]]''</ref> "[[Neo-Nazism|Neo-Nazi]]",<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/162700#.ULh0rGcYnE0 |title=Jobbik Deputy Campaigns Against 'Israeli' MP |publisher=Israel National News |date=2012-11-30 |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> [[extremism|extremist]],<ref name=BBCJan>{{cite news|title=Hungarians despair of political class|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16446682|accessdate=8 January 2012|newspaper=BBC News|date=8 January 2012}}</ref> [[racism|racist]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.xpatloop.com/news/xpat_opinion_will__hungarys_jobbik_split |title=Xpat Opinion: Will Hungary's Jobbik Split? |publisher=Xpatloop.com |date= |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> [[antisemitism|antisemitic]],<ref name="Telegraph1a">{{cite news |first=Colin |last=Freeman |title=Feminine face of Hungary's far-Right Jobbik movement seeks MEP's seat |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/eu/5372983/Feminine-face-of-Hungarys-far-Right-Jobbik-movement-seeks-MEPs-seat.html |work=The Daily Telegraph |date=2009-05-24 |accessdate=2009-06-07 |location=London}}</ref><ref name=jvl>{{cite web|title=2012 Report on Global Trends in Anti-Semitism|work=[[Jewish Virtual Library]]|url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/anti-semitism/trendtoc.html|accessdate=19 September 2013}}</ref> [[Antiziganism|antiziganist]],<ref>{{Citation |first=Ariane |last=Chebel d'Appollonia |title=Frontiers of Fear: Immigration and Insecurity in the United States and Europe |publisher=Cornell University Press |year=2012 |page=245}}</ref> and [[homophobia|homophobic]],<ref>{{Citation |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4e_nWwUBhSoC&pg=PA18&dq=jobbik+fascist&hl=en&ei=fQiDTd6ROM-84AbZqoTDCA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CC4Q6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=%22numerous%20homophobic%2C%20anti-Semitic%20and%20anti-Roma%20incidents%20in%20Hungary%22&f=false |first=Agata Anna |last=Lisiak |title=Urban Cultures in (Post) Colonial Central Europe |publisher=Purdue University Press |year=2010 |page=18}}</ref> although the party rejects these claims.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://mandiner.hu/cikk/20130227_jobbik_nem_vagyunk_antiszemitak |title=Jobbik: Nem vagyunk antiszemiták |publisher=Mandiner.hu |date= |accessdate=2013-02-27}}</ref>


===Economy===
===Economy===
Jobbik rejects globalised capitalism, and the influence of foreign investors in Hungary.<ref>{{Citation |title=Jobbik stages demonstration against banks, "foreign speculative capital" |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090804/jobbik-stages-demonstration-against-banks-foreign-speculative-capital- |publisher=politics.hu |date=2009-08-04}}</ref> In the past, Jobbik has specifically opposed [[Israel]]i and [[Jew]]ish investment in Hungary. On 4 May 2013, protesting the [[World Jewish Congress]]'s choice to locate their 2013 congress in [[Budapest]], party chairman Gabor Vona said, "The Israeli conquerors, these investors, should look for another country in the world for themselves because Hungary is not for sale",<ref name=BBC>{{cite news|title=Jobbik rally against World Jewish Congress in Budapest|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22413301|accessdate=4 May 2013|publisher=BBC News|date=4 May 2013}}</ref> responding to a 10 October 2007 speech of Israeli Prime Minister [[Shimon Peres]] "from such a small country as ours it is almost amazing, that we are buying up Manhattan, Hungary, Romania and Poland".<ref name=YouTube>{{cite news|title=Israeli President: We are buying up Manhattan, Hungary, Romania and Poland|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JL4Cu-K17vE|accessdate=12 May 2008}}</ref>
At its beginnings Jobbik rejected globalised capitalism, and the influence of [[foreign investors]] in Hungary.<ref>{{Citation |title=Jobbik stages demonstration against banks, "foreign speculative capital" |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090804/jobbik-stages-demonstration-against-banks-foreign-speculative-capital- |publisher=politics.hu |date=2009-08-04}}</ref> In the past, Jobbik has specifically opposed aggressive [[Israel]]i investment in Hungary and selling out of the country. On 4 May 2013, protesting the [[World Jewish Congress]]'s choice to locate their 2013 congress in [[Budapest]], party chairman Gabor Vona said, "The Israeli conquerors, these investors, should look for another country in the world for themselves because Hungary is not for sale",<ref name=BBC>{{cite news|title=Jobbik rally against World Jewish Congress in Budapest|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22413301|accessdate=4 May 2013|publisher=BBC News|date=4 May 2013}}</ref> responding to a highly controversial 10 October 2007 speech of Israeli Prime Minister [[Shimon Peres]]. Peres' statement that "from such a small country as ours it is almost amazing, that we are buying up Manhattan, Hungary, Romania and Poland"<ref name=YouTube>{{cite news|title=Israeli President: We are buying up Manhattan, Hungary, Romania and Poland|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JL4Cu-K17vE|accessdate=12 May 2008}}</ref> inflicted a heated debate in the Hungarian public discourse and the Israeli diplomacy had to explain the controversial words several times.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://hvg.hu/english/20071115_shimon_peresz_buying_up_hungary|title=Shimon Peres and the true Hungarians|last=Zrt.|first=HVG Kiadó|date=2007-11-15|work=hvg.hu|access-date=2017-10-20|language=hu}}</ref>

According to the 2017 Manifesto on the party's guidelines, an innovative economic policy should be followed, that's goal is to find the opportunities in the global economy. An increasingly important point of Jobbik's economic policy is the creation of a more competitive [[national economy]] that is able to provide higher wages. The party aims to support [[SME]]<nowiki/>s<ref>http://jobbik.com/manifesto_on_the_guidelines_for_a_future_jobbik_led_government - The world is in permanent change, and the economy is no exception. One of the greatest challenges for a 21st-century economic policy is to find the balance between the necessary adaptation to changes and the experience gained in the past. Lagging behind the world and drifting aimlessly are both dead ends. Countries cannot be truly successful unless they find such global economic windows of opportunity that are in line with the particular country’s social capabilities. This is what we mean by an innovative economic policy which is a token of our future success since it is the only way for Hungary to create a competitive economy able to provide fair pay.</ref> and a balanced development with [[multinational companies]].<ref>http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-hungary-farright/hungarys-jobbik-drops-some-hardline-policies-in-push-for-power-idUKKBN0N520V20150414 - “We need to find the middle ground where multinationals and banks share in our burdens without hurting their prosperity or their mission ... Clearly we do not want to expel multinational capital from Hungary.”</ref>


===Public order===
===Public order===
Jobbik officially maintains that it rejects violence and supports democracy.<ref name="hodg">{{Citation |last=Hodgson |first=Robert |title=Jobbik nationalist, but not violent: Vona |url=http://www.budapesttimes.hu/content/view/613/146/ |work=Budapest Times |date=2007-08-17}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.jobbik.com/jobbik-announcements/3091.html | title=Counsel of Dictatorship Smells Blood | publisher=Jobbik.com | date=2009-07-15 | last=Szabó | first=Gábor | quote=Jobbik finds the comments of former minister [[Péter Bárándy]] who called for special consideration to disband the party of Jobbik that enjoys a popular support of 15%, astonishing and contrary to elementary democratic values.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=LeBor |first=Adam |title=Marching Back to the Future: Magyar Garda and the Resurgence of the Right in Hungary |url=http://www.dissentmagazine.org/article/?article=1158 |dead-url=yes |date=Spring 2008 |work=[[Dissent (American magazine)|Dissent]] |quote=Vona rejects violence, and there is no evidence that Garda members have been involved in violence. |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090103035529/http://www.dissentmagazine.org/article/?article=1158 |archivedate=January 3, 2009 }}</ref> The party argues that the [[Law enforcement in Hungary|national police]] should be greatly strengthened and, along with the [[Fidesz]], supports introducing a "[[three strikes law]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.naplo-online.hu/fooldal-foldalrovat_legfrissebb_hirek/20090524_erositeni_kell_nemzettudatot |title=Erősíteni kell a nemzettudatot |publisher=Naplo-online.hu |date= |accessdate=2010-06-18}}</ref> However, [[#Relationship to the ''Magyar Gárda''|Jobbik's connections]] to the now-banned ''[[Magyar Gárda]]'' militia have raised concerns about the party's commitment to ensuring peace and order within Hungarian society, even within the party.
The party argues that the [[Law enforcement in Hungary|national police]] should be greatly strengthened and, along with the [[Fidesz]], supports introducing a "[[three strikes law]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.naplo-online.hu/fooldal-foldalrovat_legfrissebb_hirek/20090524_erositeni_kell_nemzettudatot |title=Erősíteni kell a nemzettudatot |publisher=Naplo-online.hu |date= |accessdate=2010-06-18}}</ref> However, political rivals of Jobbik accused [[#Relationship to the ''Magyar Gárda''|Jobbik that its connections]] to the falsely depicted and now-banned ''[[Magyar Gárda]]'' militia have raised concerns about the party's commitment to ensuring peace and order within Hungarian society, even within the party.


Jobbik supports bringing back the death penalty and have also promised to restore capital punishment if they come to power.<ref>http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-32523384</ref><ref>http://dailynewshungary.com/jobbik-initiates-parliamentary-day-of-debate-on-capital-punishment/</ref><ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mxi0VxB6OEk</ref>
Jobbik supports bringing back the death penalty and have also promised to restore capital punishment if they come to power.<ref>http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-32523384</ref><ref>http://dailynewshungary.com/jobbik-initiates-parliamentary-day-of-debate-on-capital-punishment/</ref><ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mxi0VxB6OEk</ref>


===Minority rights and demands for territorial autonomy for Hungarians outside of Hungary===
===Radical nationalism and irredentism===
[[File:Magyarorszag 1920.png|thumb|right|225px|Hungarian losses of territory in the [[Treaty of Trianon]], which Jobbik seeks to reverse.]]
[[File:Magyarorszag 1920.png|thumb|right|225px|Hungarian losses of territory in the [[Treaty of Trianon]]]]
Jobbik's [[Hungarian irredentism]] can be found in pleas for cross-border ethnic [[self-determination]]. For example, the party demands "territorial autonomy" for the [[Székely Land]] in Romania and desires to make [[Carpathian Ruthenia]] an independent Hungarian district.<ref name="Pretrianon">{{cite web |title=Jobbik MEPs to fight for pre-Trianon borders |url=http://politics.hu/20090615/jobbik-meps-to-fight-for-pretrianon-borders |date=2009-06-15|publisher=Politics.hu ([[Magyar Távirati Iroda|MTI]]) |quote =Jobbik will demand territorial autonomy for Szekler land in Romania and will also press for Transcarpathia in Ukraine to become an independent Hungarian district, Szegedi said.}}</ref> Jobbik frequently calls for a return to pre-Treaty of Trianon borders in political rhetoric.<ref name="Zimberg 28–32">{{cite journal |first=Alexis |last=Zimberg |title=Nostalgia and Notions of False Empire: The (Un)historical Rise of the Right in Hungary |journal=The Hidden Transcript |issue=Spring 2013 |pages=28–32 |url=http://issuu.com/the_hidden_transcript/docs/ht4_print_070513_03 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref>
Due to the fact that large [[Hungarian language|Hungarian]] population live outside of Hungary as [[ethnic minorities]], their wellbeing has great importance for Jobbik. The party therefore demands minority rights for these groups in accordance with the [[Western Europe]]<nowiki/>an standards. As the waste majority of the current Hungarian political parties, the party demands the reestablishment of the once existing [[List of autonomous areas by country|"territorial autonomy"]] in the [[Székely Land]] in [[Romania]] and desires to make [[Carpathian Ruthenia]] an independent Hungarian district<ref name="Pretrianon">{{cite web |title=Jobbik MEPs to fight for pre-Trianon borders |url=http://politics.hu/20090615/jobbik-meps-to-fight-for-pretrianon-borders |date=2009-06-15|publisher=Politics.hu ([[Magyar Távirati Iroda|MTI]]) |quote =Jobbik will demand territorial autonomy for Szekler land in Romania and will also press for Transcarpathia in Ukraine to become an independent Hungarian district, Szegedi said.}}</ref> referring to the existing example of [[South Tyrol]]<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://jobbik.com/as_shown_by_the_example_of_south_tyrol_wage_union_and_autonomy_are_vital_for_integrating_central|title=As shown by the example of South Tyrol, wage union and autonomy are vital for integrating Central Europe|date=2017-10-01|work=jobbik.com|access-date=2017-10-19|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://news-h24.com/south-tyrol-is-the-perfect-example-wage-union-and-autonomy-are-vital-for-integrating-central-europe-jobbik/|title=South Tyrol is the perfect example, Wage Union and autonomy are vital for integrating Central Europe – Jobbik - News|date=2017-10-02|work=News|access-date=2017-10-19|language=en-US}}</ref>. Jobbik is frequently accused to call for a return to pre-Treaty of Trianon borders in political rhetoric.<ref name="Zimberg 28–32">{{cite journal |first=Alexis |last=Zimberg |title=Nostalgia and Notions of False Empire: The (Un)historical Rise of the Right in Hungary |journal=The Hidden Transcript |issue=Spring 2013 |pages=28–32 |url=http://issuu.com/the_hidden_transcript/docs/ht4_print_070513_03 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref> However, in fact, Jobbik never suggested forceful changing of borders and believes that territorial and cultural autonomy in a European Union which respects [[minority rights]] is the ultimate solution.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://delhir.info/2017/09/30/jobbik-autonomia-kuzdelmet-akar-vivni-kulhonban-elo-tombmagyarsag-teruleti-es-szorvanymagyarsag-kulturalis-autonomiajaert/|title=„A Jobbik küzdeni fog a külhonban élő tömbmagyarság területi- és a szórványmagyarság kultúrális autonómiájáért” {{!}} Délhír Portál|date=2017-09-30|work=Délhír Portál|access-date=2017-10-19|language=hu-HU}}</ref><ref><nowiki>https://dailynewshungary.com/catalonias-story-tell-us-hungarians/</nowiki> - The path that we Hungarians need to take is not that of Catalonia. Instead, we must set realistic and feasible goals, the achievement of which could provide an experience of success for ethnic Hungarian communities threatened by brain drain and assimilation. In conclusion, autonomy is the objective that we must persistently pursue in terms of the Hungarian communities. This is the European, 21st-century solution for a diplomacy aiming to promote national interests.</ref>


A quarter of ethnic Hungarians live outside the country.<ref name="Inder">{{cite book |last=Inder Singh |first=Anita |title=Democracy, ethnic diversity, and security in post-communist Europe |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nU3bO8uiBn0C&pg=PA97&dq=Magyar+and+Russian+minorities+are+the+largest+minority+groups+in+Europe#v=onepage&q=&f=false|publisher=Central European University Press |year=2000 |page=97 |isbn=0-275-97258-5 |quote=[including the nations of the former Soviet Union] Hungarian and Russian minorities are the largest minority groups in Europe, about one-tenth of all Russians and a quarter of Magyars live outside Russia and Hungary, respectively.}}</ref> Jobbik dedicates itself to supporting the cause of the significant [[Hungarian people|Hungarian]] minorities residing in adjoining countries.<ref>Molnar, ''A Concise History of Hungary'', p. 262 [https://books.google.com/books?id=y0g4YEp7ZrsC&pg=PA262&dq=found+themselves+separated+from+their+motherland&ei=UI13Sa3bEouYMsCR-L4E online]; Richard C. Frucht, ''Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture'' p. 359–360 [https://books.google.com/books?id=lVBB1a0rC70C&pg=RA1-PA360&dq=found+themselves+separated+from+their+motherland&ei=UI13Sa3bEouYMsCR-L4E#PRA1-PA359,M1 online])</ref>
A quarter of ethnic Hungarians live outside the country.<ref name="Inder">{{cite book |last=Inder Singh |first=Anita |title=Democracy, ethnic diversity, and security in post-communist Europe |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nU3bO8uiBn0C&pg=PA97&dq=Magyar+and+Russian+minorities+are+the+largest+minority+groups+in+Europe#v=onepage&q=&f=false|publisher=Central European University Press |year=2000 |page=97 |isbn=0-275-97258-5 |quote=[including the nations of the former Soviet Union] Hungarian and Russian minorities are the largest minority groups in Europe, about one-tenth of all Russians and a quarter of Magyars live outside Russia and Hungary, respectively.}}</ref> Many times they face [[discrimination]]<ref>{{Cite journal|last=|first=|date=2015|title=Romania 2015 Human Rights Report|url=https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/253103.pdf|journal=US Department of State - Human Rights Reports|volume=|pages=|via=}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/index.htm?year=2016&dlid=265464#wrapper|title=Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016 - Romania|last=|first=|date=|website=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/index.htm?year=2016&dlid=265464#wrapper|title=Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2016 - Slovakia|last=|first=|date=|website=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=}}</ref>because of their ethnicity, that causes regular diplomatic debates among Hungary and its neighbors. Jobbik dedicates itself to supporting the cause of the significant [[Hungarian people|Hungarian]] minorities residing in adjoining countries.<ref>Molnar, ''A Concise History of Hungary'', p. 262 [https://books.google.com/books?id=y0g4YEp7ZrsC&pg=PA262&dq=found+themselves+separated+from+their+motherland&ei=UI13Sa3bEouYMsCR-L4E online]; Richard C. Frucht, ''Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture'' p. 359–360 [https://books.google.com/books?id=lVBB1a0rC70C&pg=RA1-PA360&dq=found+themselves+separated+from+their+motherland&ei=UI13Sa3bEouYMsCR-L4E#PRA1-PA359,M1 online])</ref> The party is very vocal in defending schools, churches and cultural values of the Hungarians outside Hungary.


The meaning of the party's [[European Parliament election, 2009 (Hungary)|2009 election]] slogan "Hungary belongs to the Hungarians" (''Magyarország a Magyaroké!'') was also the subject of considerable scrutiny. Some critics thought the slogan essentially tautological,<ref>{{Citation |last=Heltai-Hopp |first=András |title=Big players fight domestic battle in EP election |date=2009-06-05 |url=http://www.budapesttimes.hu/content/view/12139/219/ |work=[[The Budapest Times]]}}</ref> while others were sufficiently concerned to mount a successful complaint at the National Electoral Commission, which ruled it "unconstitutional" on the very eve of the election.<ref>{{Citation |title=EP elections – Hungary elections committee finds radical Jobbik's slogan unconstitutional |date=2009-06-04 |url=http://www.budapesttimes.hu/content/view/12155/159/ |work=[[The Budapest Times]]}}</ref>
The meaning of the party's [[European Parliament election, 2009 (Hungary)|2009 election]] slogan "Hungary belongs to the Hungarians" (''Magyarország a Magyaroké!'') was also the subject of considerable scrutiny. Some critics thought the slogan essentially tautological,<ref>{{Citation |last=Heltai-Hopp |first=András |title=Big players fight domestic battle in EP election |date=2009-06-05 |url=http://www.budapesttimes.hu/content/view/12139/219/ |work=[[The Budapest Times]]}}</ref> while others were sufficiently concerned to mount a successful complaint at the National Electoral Commission, which ruled it "unconstitutional" on the very eve of the election.<ref>{{Citation |title=EP elections – Hungary elections committee finds radical Jobbik's slogan unconstitutional |date=2009-06-04 |url=http://www.budapesttimes.hu/content/view/12155/159/ |work=[[The Budapest Times]]}}</ref>


On 11 March 2014, in response to a demonstration in [[Târgu Mureș]], the [[Romania]]n president [[Traian Băsescu]] publicly asked the Romanian Government and the Romanian Parliament to issue a document to ban Jobbik members from Romania.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://xml.agerpres.ro/english/2014/03/11/basescu-asking-for-a-document-to-be-issued-to-ban-presence-in-romania-of-jobbik-party-members-20-47-34 |title=Basescu asking for a document to be issued to ban presence in Romania of Jobbik party members |work=[[AGERPRES]] |date=11 March 2014 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref>
On 11 March 2014, in response to a demonstration in [[Târgu Mureș]], the [[Romania]]n president [[Traian Băsescu]] publicly asked the Romanian Government and the Romanian Parliament to issue a document to ban Jobbik members from Romania.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://xml.agerpres.ro/english/2014/03/11/basescu-asking-for-a-document-to-be-issued-to-ban-presence-in-romania-of-jobbik-party-members-20-47-34 |title=Basescu asking for a document to be issued to ban presence in Romania of Jobbik party members |work=[[AGERPRES]] |date=11 March 2014 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref>

Besides defending the rights of ethnic Hungarians living outside Hungary, Jobbik actively supports the cultural autonomy and language rights of the autochtonous [[Minorities in Hungary|ethnic minorities living in Hungary]].<ref>http://www.szavayistvan.jobbik.hu/mikor_kaphatnak_v_gre_a_hazai_nemzetis_gek_probl_ma_n_lk_l_nemzetis_gi_nyelv_ingyenes_anyak_nyvi_kiv - Szávay István: When will members of ethnic minorities in Hungary receive their Extracts from the Register of Birth without problem?</ref><ref>http://www.oslovma.hu/index.php/hu/magyarul/172-magyarul3-magyarul3/1096-a-nemzetisegek-helyzeterol-targyalt-az-orszaggyules - "István Szávay told that Jobbik had been supporting ethinc minorities since its establishment and regarded them as constituent parts of the state."</ref>

The party has a pragmatic stance on the cooperation of the [[Central Europe|Central European]]<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://thehungaryjournal.wordpress.com/2017/10/18/jobbik-the-v4-should-have-a-permanent-parliamentary-assembly/|title=Jobbik: The V4 should have a permanent parliamentary assembly|date=2017-10-18|work=Hungary Journal|access-date=2017-10-19|language=en-US}}</ref> nations and countries and, despite the differences on the views about history, strenuously supports the cooperation of the countries of the region in the institutions of the EU, aiming to reach common goals. Therefore politicians of Jobbik called for action in the framework of the Wage Union European Citizens' Initiative.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wageunion.eu/en/our-declaration|title=Our Declaration|last=www.wageunion.eu|website=www.wageunion.eu|language=en|access-date=2017-10-19}}</ref>


==History and development==
==History and development==
Line 78: Line 105:


In the 2006 national elections the alliance won only 2.2% of the votes. Therefore, Jobbik termed the alliance a failure and virtually broke it up. In 2009 the State Audit Office (ÁSZ) reported the alliance for grave breaches of accounting rules. Jobbik blamed MIÉP alone for the irregularities.<ref name="allbr">{{Citation | url=http://www.politics.hu/20090819/prosecutors-target-jobbikmiep-2006-election-vehicle | title=Prosecutors target Jobbik-MIÉP 2006 election vehicle | date=2009-08-19 | publisher=Politics.hu}}</ref>
In the 2006 national elections the alliance won only 2.2% of the votes. Therefore, Jobbik termed the alliance a failure and virtually broke it up. In 2009 the State Audit Office (ÁSZ) reported the alliance for grave breaches of accounting rules. Jobbik blamed MIÉP alone for the irregularities.<ref name="allbr">{{Citation | url=http://www.politics.hu/20090819/prosecutors-target-jobbikmiep-2006-election-vehicle | title=Prosecutors target Jobbik-MIÉP 2006 election vehicle | date=2009-08-19 | publisher=Politics.hu}}</ref>

In the 2010 and 2014 general elections Jobbik had no political ally. Recently, some left-wing [[Intellectual|intellectuals]] suggested a [[coalition]] between the left-liberal parties and Jobbik<ref>http://hvg.hu/velemeny/20160308_Jobbik_MSZP_LMP_koalicio_TGM - Miklós Tamás Gáspár: "It is spoken in the city that there are some political entrepreneurs and "influential circles" that are playing with the idea, that on the next general elections a lose coalition of Jobbik, MSZP and LMP could defeat Fidesz-KDNP"</ref> in order to change the Fidesz government, however Jobbik rejected the idea to cooperate with parties they call "20th century powers".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://dailynewshungary.com/vona-coalition-with-left-wing-partners-fiction/|title=Vona: coalition with left-wing partners “fiction”|last=|first=|date=|website=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=}}</ref> At the same time Gábor Vona told in an interview that “We will need several bridges ... to voters on the left, not to parties on the left. Jobbik offers a message, a program both to former leftist and former rightist voters.”<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hungary-jobbik/hungarys-jobbik-ditches-far-right-past-to-challenge-orban-in-2018-idUSKBN14V1PW |title= Hungary's Jobbik ditches far-right past to challenge Orban in 2018 |date= Jan 11, 2017 |work=Reuters |access-date= 2017-10-20}}</ref>


===''Magyar Gárda'' and conflicts in the party===
===''Magyar Gárda'' and conflicts in the party===
{{Main|Magyar Gárda}}
{{Main|Magyar Gárda}}
[[File:Magyar Gárda Kórus.jpg|thumb|left|225px|A [[Magyar Gárda]] choir sings in [[Békéscsaba]].]]
[[File:Magyar Gárda Kórus.jpg|thumb|left|225px|A [[Magyar Gárda]] choir sings in [[Békéscsaba]].]]
During the 2000s public order was one of the key topics of the Hungarian political life, especially after in 2006 [[Romani people|Roma]] people lynched a Hungarian teacher in the Eastern Hungarian village of [[Olaszliszka]].<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://hungarianspectrum.org/2009/11/13/olaszliszka-hungary-murder-final-verdict/|title=Olaszliszka (Hungary) murder: Final verdict|date=2009-11-13|work=Hungarian Spectrum|access-date=2017-10-19|language=en-US}}</ref> The case turned public attention to the failure of Roma integration and the inability of the [[Rendőrség|Hungarian police]] to maintain law and order in the Hungarian countryide. The idea of setting up a "national guard", similar to the [[National Guard of the United States]], became widespread among the conservative political parties of Hungary.

In June 2007, Gábor Vona, supported by the party, founded and registered the organisation called [[Magyar Gárda]] "Hungarian Guard", which says in its deed of foundation that it intends to become "part or core" of a national guard to be set up in accordance with the [[Gabriel Bethlen]] programme, and it also wishes to participate actively "in strengthening national self-defence" and "maintaining public order" as well as supporting and organising social and charity missions, in disaster prevention and civil defence. The foundation of the Guard was accompanied by sharp political debate.
In June 2007, Gábor Vona, supported by the party, founded and registered the organisation called [[Magyar Gárda]] "Hungarian Guard", which says in its deed of foundation that it intends to become "part or core" of a national guard to be set up in accordance with the [[Gabriel Bethlen]] programme, and it also wishes to participate actively "in strengthening national self-defence" and "maintaining public order" as well as supporting and organising social and charity missions, in disaster prevention and civil defence. The foundation of the Guard was accompanied by sharp political debate.


Line 88: Line 119:
On 2 July 2009 the Metropolitan Court of Appeal (''Fővárosi Ítélőtábla'') disbanded the Hungarian Guard Movement because the court held that the activities of the organization were against the [[minority rights|human rights of minorities]] as guaranteed by the [[Constitution of Hungary]]. The Guard has attempted to reorganize itself as a civil service association, known as the ''Magyar Gárda Foundation'', engaged in cultural and nation building activities rather than politics. Its renewed activities are opposed by the Hungarian authorities<ref name=banning>{{cite web|url=http://www.politics.hu/20090714/police-investigate-new-magyar-garda-former-minister-mulls-banning-jobbik|title=Police investigate "new" Magyar Gárda; former minister mulls banning Jobbik|work=Politics.hu|accessdate=14 February 2015}}</ref> and prosecutors claim that the founding of the new organization is in contempt of previous court rulings.
On 2 July 2009 the Metropolitan Court of Appeal (''Fővárosi Ítélőtábla'') disbanded the Hungarian Guard Movement because the court held that the activities of the organization were against the [[minority rights|human rights of minorities]] as guaranteed by the [[Constitution of Hungary]]. The Guard has attempted to reorganize itself as a civil service association, known as the ''Magyar Gárda Foundation'', engaged in cultural and nation building activities rather than politics. Its renewed activities are opposed by the Hungarian authorities<ref name=banning>{{cite web|url=http://www.politics.hu/20090714/police-investigate-new-magyar-garda-former-minister-mulls-banning-jobbik|title=Police investigate "new" Magyar Gárda; former minister mulls banning Jobbik|work=Politics.hu|accessdate=14 February 2015}}</ref> and prosecutors claim that the founding of the new organization is in contempt of previous court rulings.


After several splits inside the organization, most of the former members of Magyar Gárda has become inactive. On January 28, 2017 some radical members of Magyar Gárda organized a demonstration against Gábor Vona and the Jobbik in front of the building where Jobbik held its year-opening event. Participants of the demonstration called the new politics of Jobbik a betrayal of the right-wing.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://hungarytoday.hu/news/hungarian-far-right-jobbik-party-holds-year-opening-conference-28046|title=Hungarian Far-Right Jobbik Party Holds Year-Opening Conference - Hungary Today|work=Hungary Today|access-date=2017-10-19|language=en-US}}</ref>
==Controversy==
The party has strenuously denied<ref>{{Citation |last=LeBor |first=Adam |title=Jobbik: Meet the BNP's fascist friends in Hungary |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article6457752.ece |publisher=timesonline.co.uk |date=2009-06-09 |quote=Jobbik strongly denies that it is anti-Semitic and has condemned the Holocaust. "We are not against anyone, just for Hungary," its leaders say. |location=London}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |last=Stancil |first=Jordan |title=Jobbik Rising |url=http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090629/stancil |publisher=thenation.com |date=2009-06-12 |quote=Jobbik denies accusations of racism or anti-Semitism}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |title=Racist Violence Flares In Central And E.Europe |url=http://www.javno.com/en-world/racist-violence-flares-in-central-and-eeurope_206180 |publisher=javno.com |date=2008-11-21}}</ref> allegations of anti-semitism or racism, as being either politically motivated<ref>{{Citation |last=Moore |first=Matthew |title=Hungarian extremist running far-right website from UK |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/3416496/Hungarian-extremist-running-far-right-website-from-UK.html |work=Telegraph |date=2008-11-10 |quote=When confronted at his home by the newspaper, Mr Fuzessy insisted he was not claiming benefits in the UK and denied Jobbik was fascist. "My party is radical but it is patriotic, not nationalist," he said. "Millions in Hungary support us. Those who call us Nazis are just communists." |location=London}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Jobbik confident of winning EP seat, party leader says |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090513/jobbik-confident-of-winning-ep-seat-party-leader-says |publisher=politics.hu (source: [[Magyar Távirati Iroda|MTI]]) |date=2009-05-13 |quote=The party is embroiled in legal action against the liberal Free Democrats, which recently branded the party as "Neo-Nazi", a label which Jobbik vigorously denies.}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |last=Gergely |first=Andras |title=Che's the man for Hungary's young Socialists |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/gc04/idUSEIC24386320070322 |publisher=reuters.com |date=2007-03-22}}</ref> or simply false. It has also dismissed the criticism of perceived anti-semitism, racism and homophobia as the "favourite topics" of an "ignorant and misled" [[European Union]].<ref name=Telegraph1 /> Even so, the movement has been accused of playing on those fears.<ref name="Telegraph1">{{cite news |first=Colin |last=Freeman |title=Feminine face of Hungary's far-Right Jobbik movement seeks MEP's seat |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/eu/5372983/Feminine-face-of-Hungarys-far-Right-Jobbik-movement-seeks-MEPs-seat.html |publisher=The Daily Telegraph |date=2009-05-24 |accessdate=2009-06-07 |quote=Like her party, Dr Morvai denies being anti-Semitic, homophobic, or racist in any way, dismissing such criticisms as the "favourite topics" of an "ignorant and misled" European Union. But magazines supportive of her party's aims openly play on such fears. One publication available at the venue of a Jobbik press conference last week contained an item entitled "Who decides?" on Hungary's future. The non-Jobbik options were either a dreadlocked Jew, a pair of naked homosexuals, or a dark-skinned thug. |location=London}}</ref> Jobbik has also been linked to homophobic incidents in Budapest.<ref name="Homophobia in Hungary, The Yale Globalist">{{cite web|url=http://tyglobalist.org/index.php/20090511205/Features/Homophobia-in-Hungary.html |title=Homophobia in Hungary |publisher=The Yale Globalist |date=2009-05-11 |accessdate=2009-08-27 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090522002526/http://tyglobalist.org/index.php/20090511205/Features/Homophobia-in-Hungary.html |archivedate=May 22, 2009 }}</ref><ref name="Hungarian homophobic party launches paramilitary wing, Pink News">{{cite web|url=http://www.pinknews.co.uk/news/articles/2005-5273.html|title=Hungarian homophobic party launches paramilitary wing|publisher=Pink News|date=2007-08-25|accessdate=2009-08-27}}</ref>


=== Moderating the party ===
{{Antisemitism}}
[[File:Jobbik Kongress.jpg|thumb|440x440px|Gábor Vona speaks on the party congress of Jobbik in 2017]]
{{Neo-fascism}}
Before the 2014 [[General election|parliamentary elections]] a new political trend, the so-called ''néppártosodás'' (English: moderation to a people's party) appeared in Jobbik. The party adopted a new style of [[communication]] while reversing many radical elements of its earlier program.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://freedomhouse.org/blog/far-right-hungarian-party-jobbik-moderating-good-thing|title=The Far-Right Hungarian Party Jobbik Is Moderating. Is That a Good Thing?|website=freedomhouse.org|language=en|access-date=2017-10-24}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.haaretz.com/jewish/news/1.764772|title=Anti-Semitic Hungarian Party Embraces Israel and Jews|last=Reuters|date=2017|work=Haaretz|access-date=2017-10-24|language=en}}</ref>Jobbik, according to its leaders, from a radical right-wing party turned to a conservative people's party with more moderate politics. President of Jobbik Gábor Vona, in an interview, personally promised to "cut the wildlings" of the one-time radicalism.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.jobbik.com/gabor_vona_on_the_wildling|title=Gábor Vona on the wildling|date=2015-04-24|work=jobbik.com|access-date=2017-10-24|language=en}}</ref>

=== Rising popularity among [[Youth|young people]] ===
Due to the disillusioning of young people because no-perspectives, decreasing living conditions and frustrating level of state corruption, popularity of Jobbik skyrocketed among younger generations. Since 2014 Jobbik consciously tried to address young people that are disappointed with other parties. As a result of its youth policy Jobbik's popularity has risen to a never seen level. According to an international survey, conducted in 2016, 53 percent of the young Hungarians aged between 18 and 35 years would vote for Jobbik.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://visegradpost.com/en/2016/04/06/the-jobbik-at-53-among-15-34/|title=The Jobbik at 53% among 15-34 {{!}} Visegrád Post|website=visegradpost.com|language=en-GB|access-date=2017-10-24}}</ref>

==Controversy==
The party has strenuously denied<ref>{{Citation |last=LeBor |first=Adam |title=Jobbik: Meet the BNP's fascist friends in Hungary |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article6457752.ece |publisher=timesonline.co.uk |date=2009-06-09 |quote=Jobbik strongly denies that it is anti-Semitic and has condemned the Holocaust. "We are not against anyone, just for Hungary," its leaders say. |location=London}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |last=Stancil |first=Jordan |title=Jobbik Rising |url=http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090629/stancil |publisher=thenation.com |date=2009-06-12 |quote=Jobbik denies accusations of racism or anti-Semitism}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |title=Racist Violence Flares In Central And E.Europe |url=http://www.javno.com/en-world/racist-violence-flares-in-central-and-eeurope_206180 |publisher=javno.com |date=2008-11-21}}</ref> allegations of anti-semitism or racism, as being either politically motivated<ref>{{Citation |last=Moore |first=Matthew |title=Hungarian extremist running far-right website from UK |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/3416496/Hungarian-extremist-running-far-right-website-from-UK.html |work=Telegraph |date=2008-11-10 |quote=When confronted at his home by the newspaper, Mr Fuzessy insisted he was not claiming benefits in the UK and denied Jobbik was fascist. "My party is radical but it is patriotic, not nationalist," he said. "Millions in Hungary support us. Those who call us Nazis are just communists." |location=London}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Jobbik confident of winning EP seat, party leader says |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090513/jobbik-confident-of-winning-ep-seat-party-leader-says |publisher=politics.hu (source: [[Magyar Távirati Iroda|MTI]]) |date=2009-05-13 |quote=The party is embroiled in legal action against the liberal Free Democrats, which recently branded the party as "Neo-Nazi", a label which Jobbik vigorously denies.}}</ref><ref>{{Citation |last=Gergely |first=Andras |title=Che's the man for Hungary's young Socialists |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/gc04/idUSEIC24386320070322 |publisher=reuters.com |date=2007-03-22}}</ref> or simply false. It has also dismissed the criticism of perceived anti-semitism, racism and homophobia as the "favourite topics" of the political opponents. Even so, the movement has been accused of playing on those fears.<ref name="Telegraph1">{{cite news |first=Colin |last=Freeman |title=Feminine face of Hungary's far-Right Jobbik movement seeks MEP's seat |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/eu/5372983/Feminine-face-of-Hungarys-far-Right-Jobbik-movement-seeks-MEPs-seat.html |publisher=The Daily Telegraph |date=2009-05-24 |accessdate=2009-06-07 |quote=Like her party, Dr Morvai denies being anti-Semitic, homophobic, or racist in any way, dismissing such criticisms as the "favourite topics" of an "ignorant and misled" European Union. But magazines supportive of her party's aims openly play on such fears. One publication available at the venue of a Jobbik press conference last week contained an item entitled "Who decides?" on Hungary's future. The non-Jobbik options were either a dreadlocked Jew, a pair of naked homosexuals, or a dark-skinned thug. |location=London}}</ref>


===Comments by members===
===Comments by members===
On the eve of the [[European Parliament election, 2009|2009 elections to the European parliament]], a comment was posted on an unofficial and unverified Hungarian political internet forum, allegedly in the name of [[Krisztina Morvai]], who then headed the party's electoral list. Addressing their remarks to Hungarian Jews the comment poster stated that they "would be glad if the so-called proud Hungarian Jews went back to playing with their tiny circumcised dicks instead of vilifying me."<ref name="PoHu">{{cite web |author=[http://www.hatc.hu/whatis.html Hungary Around the Clock] |title=Outrage over obscene anti-Semitic Internet post by Morvai |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090605/outrage-over-obscene-antisemitic-internet-post-by-morvai |date=2009-06-05}}</ref><ref name="haaretz">{{cite web |first=Yehuda |last=Lahav |title='Hungarian Jews should stick to playing with their circumcised tails' |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1090959.html |publisher=[[Haaretz]] |date=2009-06-07}}</ref><ref name="Guard1">{{cite news|first=Ian|last=Traynor |title=Rightwingers set to wipe out leaders of Hungarian revolution |url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2009/jun/07/rightwing-hungary-european-election |work=The Guardian |date=2009-06-07 |location=London}}</ref> News of this comment, which has been roundly condemned,<ref name="redux">{{Citation |last=Holland |first=Adam |title=Hungarian fascists redux |url=http://adamholland.blogspot.com/2009/07/hungarian-fascists-on-rise-make-common.html |publisher=adamholland.blogspot.com |date=2009-07-12}}</ref> spread rapidly around the world<ref name="cfca">{{Citation |title=Hungary – Obscene antisemitic internet post by Morvai |url=http://www.antisemitism.org.il/eng/events/40741/Hungary-ObsceneantisemiticinternetpostbyMorvai |publisher=The Coordinating Forum for Countering Antisemitism |date=2009-06-07}}</ref><ref name="macleans">{{Citation |last=Steyn |first=Mark |title=Mark Steyn on why the fascists are winning in Europe |url=http://www2.macleans.ca/2009/06/18/why-the-fascists-are-winning-in-europe/ |publisher=macleans.ca |date=2009-06-18}}</ref> and eventually even featured in an article by ''[[The Economist]]''.<ref name="econ1">{{Citation |title=Hungary’s opposition: A nasty party |url=http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=13871359 |work=[[The Economist]] |date=2009-06-18}}</ref> Morvai's critics have pointed to her refusal to even discuss the issue,<ref name="wonder">{{Citation |title=Anti-semitism, Hungarian style |url=http://wonderland.cafebabel.com/en/post/2009/07/06/Anti-semitism,-Hungarian-style |publisher=wonderland.cafebabel.com |date=2009-07-06}}</ref> let alone deny it;<ref name="c4n">{{Citation |last=Newman|first=Cathy |title=BNP's Griffin: Islam is a cancer |url=http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid1184614595?bctid=28993521001 |publisher=[[Channel 4 news|Channel 4 News]] (Video)|date=2009-07-09}}</ref> implying that this is sufficient to ascribe authorship of the remarks to her.<ref name="jta">{{Citation |last=Spritzer |first=Dinah |title=Tough times drive European voters to far right |url=http://jta.org/news/article/2009/06/09/1005768/tough-economic-times-drive-european-voters-to-far-right |publisher=[[Jewish Telegraphic Agency]] |date=2009-06-09}}</ref>
On the eve of the [[European Parliament election, 2009|2009 elections to the European parliament]], a comment was posted on an unofficial and unverified Hungarian political internet forum, allegedly in the name of [[Krisztina Morvai]], who then headed the party's electoral list. Addressing their remarks to Hungarian Jews the comment poster stated that they "would be glad if the so-called proud Hungarian Jews went back to playing with their tiny circumcised dicks instead of vilifying me."<ref name="PoHu">{{cite web |author=[http://www.hatc.hu/whatis.html Hungary Around the Clock] |title=Outrage over obscene anti-Semitic Internet post by Morvai |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090605/outrage-over-obscene-antisemitic-internet-post-by-morvai |date=2009-06-05}}</ref><ref name="haaretz">{{cite web |first=Yehuda |last=Lahav |title='Hungarian Jews should stick to playing with their circumcised tails' |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1090959.html |publisher=[[Haaretz]] |date=2009-06-07}}</ref><ref name="Guard1">{{cite news|first=Ian|last=Traynor |title=Rightwingers set to wipe out leaders of Hungarian revolution |url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2009/jun/07/rightwing-hungary-european-election |work=The Guardian |date=2009-06-07 |location=London}}</ref> News of this comment, which has been roundly condemned,<ref name="redux">{{Citation |last=Holland |first=Adam |title=Hungarian fascists redux |url=http://adamholland.blogspot.com/2009/07/hungarian-fascists-on-rise-make-common.html |publisher=adamholland.blogspot.com |date=2009-07-12}}</ref> spread rapidly around the world<ref name="cfca">{{Citation |title=Hungary – Obscene antisemitic internet post by Morvai |url=http://www.antisemitism.org.il/eng/events/40741/Hungary-ObsceneantisemiticinternetpostbyMorvai |publisher=The Coordinating Forum for Countering Antisemitism |date=2009-06-07}}</ref><ref name="macleans">{{Citation |last=Steyn |first=Mark |title=Mark Steyn on why the fascists are winning in Europe |url=http://www2.macleans.ca/2009/06/18/why-the-fascists-are-winning-in-europe/ |publisher=macleans.ca |date=2009-06-18}}</ref> and eventually even featured in an article by ''[[The Economist]]''.<ref name="econ1">{{Citation |title=Hungary’s opposition: A nasty party |url=http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=13871359 |work=[[The Economist]] |date=2009-06-18}}</ref> Morvai's critics have pointed to her refusal to even discuss the issue,<ref name="wonder">{{Citation |title=Anti-semitism, Hungarian style |url=http://wonderland.cafebabel.com/en/post/2009/07/06/Anti-semitism,-Hungarian-style |publisher=wonderland.cafebabel.com |date=2009-07-06}}</ref> let alone deny it;<ref name="c4n">{{Citation |last=Newman|first=Cathy |title=BNP's Griffin: Islam is a cancer |url=http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid1184614595?bctid=28993521001 |publisher=[[Channel 4 news|Channel 4 News]] (Video)|date=2009-07-09}}</ref> implying that this is sufficient to ascribe authorship of the remarks to her.<ref name="jta">{{Citation |last=Spritzer |first=Dinah |title=Tough times drive European voters to far right |url=http://jta.org/news/article/2009/06/09/1005768/tough-economic-times-drive-european-voters-to-far-right |publisher=[[Jewish Telegraphic Agency]] |date=2009-06-09}}</ref>


Her supporters however, claim that though she certainly has a record of being critical of the state of Israel<ref>{{Citation |title=Krisztina Morvai Accuses Israel Of War Crimes |url=http://www.mathaba.net/news/?x=616450 |publisher=mathaba.net |date=2009-01-29}}</ref> given a sympathy for the Palestinian cause she developed while working as an international human rights lawyer,<ref>{{Citation | url=http://www.unis.unvienna.org/unis/pressrels/2005/wom1511.html | title=Women’s Anti-Discrimination Committee Voices Concern about Inequalities among Ethnic Groups, as It Takes up Israel’s Report | date=2005-07-13 | publisher=[[United Nations Information Service]]}}</ref> the idea of Morvai being an anti-Semite is "simply ridiculous," given that at the time of her alleged remarks she was married to a Hungarian of Jewish origin,<ref name="regard">{{cite web |url= http://www.regard-est.com/home/breve_contenu.php?id=1029&PHPSESSID=2f6df79824320b084d53758b2d58ff0f |title=Krisztina Morvai: Une contradiction extrêmement hongroise |trans_title=Krisztina Morvai: An extremely Hungarian contradiction |first=Sébastien |last=Gobert |work=Regard Sur L'Est |date=15 January 2010 |accessdate=24 October 2014 |language=French }}</ref> with whom she has three children,<ref>{{Citation |title=Please accept our apologies for somehow never mentioning that Hungary's terrifying new "Nazi" leader is happily married to a Jew |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090603/please-accept-our-apologies-for-somehow-never-mentioning-that-hungarys-terrifying-new-nazi-leader-is-happily-married-to-a-jew |publisher=Political Pest |date=2009-06-03}}</ref> but from whom she is now separated.<ref name="regard" />
Her supporters however, claim that though she certainly has a record of being critical of the state of Israel<ref>{{Citation |title=Krisztina Morvai Accuses Israel Of War Crimes |url=http://www.mathaba.net/news/?x=616450 |publisher=mathaba.net |date=2009-01-29}}</ref> given a sympathy for the Palestinian cause she developed while working as an international human rights lawyer,<ref>{{Citation | url=http://www.unis.unvienna.org/unis/pressrels/2005/wom1511.html | title=Women’s Anti-Discrimination Committee Voices Concern about Inequalities among Ethnic Groups, as It Takes up Israel’s Report | date=2005-07-13 | publisher=[[United Nations Information Service]]}}</ref> the idea of Morvai being an anti-Semite is "simply ridiculous," given that at the time of her alleged remarks she was married to a Hungarian of Jewish origin,<ref name="regard">{{cite web |url= http://www.regard-est.com/home/breve_contenu.php?id=1029&PHPSESSID=2f6df79824320b084d53758b2d58ff0f |title=Krisztina Morvai: Une contradiction extrêmement hongroise |trans_title=Krisztina Morvai: An extremely Hungarian contradiction |first=Sébastien |last=Gobert |work=Regard Sur L'Est |date=15 January 2010 |accessdate=24 October 2014 |language=French }}</ref> with whom she has three children,<ref>{{Citation |title=Please accept our apologies for somehow never mentioning that Hungary's terrifying new "Nazi" leader is happily married to a Jew |url=http://www.politics.hu/20090603/please-accept-our-apologies-for-somehow-never-mentioning-that-hungarys-terrifying-new-nazi-leader-is-happily-married-to-a-jew |publisher=Political Pest |date=2009-06-03}}</ref> but from whom she is now separated.<ref name="regard" /> In addition, Morvai is an independent public intellectual and has never become an official member of Jobbik. She was put on the electoral list of Jobbik for the European Parliament as an internationally recognized lawyer and human rights activist. Therefore, in some aspects, she has always enjoyed freedom from the party's official line.


In a newsletter published by a group calling itself "The trade union of Hungarian police officers prepared for action", the following was allegedly printed: "Given our current situation, anti-Semitism is not just our right, but it is the duty of every Hungarian homeland lover, and we must prepare for armed battle against the Jews." The editor of the union, Judit Szima, was a Jobbik candidate in the upcoming election for the European Union parliament. ''[[Haaretz]]'' alleged Szima "didn't see anything wrong with the content of the article."<ref name="Haaretz2">{{cite web |first=Yehuda |last=Lahav |title='Proud Hungarians must prepare for war against the Jews' |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1089550.html |work=[[Haaretz]] |date=2009-06-06 |accessdate=2009-06-07}}</ref>
In a newsletter published by a group calling itself "The trade union of Hungarian police officers prepared for action", the following was allegedly printed: "Given our current situation, anti-Semitism is not just our right, but it is the duty of every Hungarian homeland lover, and we must prepare for armed battle against the Jews." The editor of the union, Judit Szima, was a Jobbik candidate in the upcoming election for the European Union parliament. ''[[Haaretz]]'' alleged Szima "didn't see anything wrong with the content of the article."<ref name="Haaretz2">{{cite web |first=Yehuda |last=Lahav |title='Proud Hungarians must prepare for war against the Jews' |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1089550.html |work=[[Haaretz]] |date=2009-06-06 |accessdate=2009-06-07}}</ref> Cooperation between Jobbik and the trade union led by Szima was dismantled in 2010 and since then there is no affiliation between them.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://hvg.hu/itthon/20100925_tettrekesz_szakszervezet_jobbik|title=Felbomlott a Tettrekész és a Jobbik közötti megállapodás|last=Zrt.|first=HVG Kiadó|date=2010-09-25|work=hvg.hu|access-date=2017-10-20|language=hu}}</ref>


During spring 2012, Jobbik representative in Hungarian parliament Zsolt Baráth caused an outrage by commemorating 1882 [[blood libel]] against the Jews in Parliament. The [[Tiszaeszlár Affair|Tiszaeszlár blood libel]], found later to be unrelated to Jews, was known as first major anti-Jewish event in modern Hungary, predating [[the Holocaust]].<ref>{{cite web|author=FreeHungary |url=http://freehungary.hu/archives-new/1259-discovering-jewish-roots--former-anti-semitic-party-leader-meets-with-rabbi-koeves.html |title=Discovering Jewish roots – former anti-Semitic party leader meets with rabbi Köves |publisher=Freehungary.hu |date=2012-08-08 |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref>
During spring 2012, Jobbik representative in Hungarian parliament Zsolt Baráth caused an outrage by commemorating 1882 [[blood libel]] against the Jews in Parliament. The [[Tiszaeszlár Affair|Tiszaeszlár blood libel]], found later to be unrelated to Jews, was known as first major anti-Jewish event in modern Hungary, predating [[the Holocaust]].<ref>{{cite web|author=FreeHungary |url=http://freehungary.hu/archives-new/1259-discovering-jewish-roots--former-anti-semitic-party-leader-meets-with-rabbi-koeves.html |title=Discovering Jewish roots – former anti-Semitic party leader meets with rabbi Köves |publisher=Freehungary.hu |date=2012-08-08 |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> The speech of Baráth caused controversy among Jobbik MPs: some - however finding it inappropriate and uncalled for - stated that in a matured democracy there should not be taboo topics, while leaders of the Jobbik Parliamentary Group told the media that they had evaluated the speech and learnt the lesson that they should care more about what their MPs are talking. After the incident Baráth was not re-elected and is not an MP of Jobbik anymore.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.atv.hu/belfold/20120412_a_jobbik_reagalt_barath_zsolt_botranyos_felszolalasara?source=hirkereso|title=A Jobbik reagált Baráth Zsolt botrányos parlamenti felszólalására|last=ATV|website=ATV.hu|access-date=2017-10-20}}</ref>


In November 2012, the party's deputy parliamentary leader, [[:hu:Gyöngyösi Márton|Márton Gyöngyösi]], posted a video speech on the Jobbik website in which he stated: "I think such a conflict makes it timely to tally up people of Jewish ancestry who live here, especially in the Hungarian Parliament and the Hungarian government, who, indeed, pose a national security risk to Hungary."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4312434,00.html |title=Hungary: Far-right leader demands lists of Jews |publisher=Ynetnews.com |date=27 November 2012 |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> As [[Al Jazeera]] reported, this led to "international condemnation of Nazi-style policies and a protest outside the legislature in Budapest.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2012/11/2012112722413396434.html |title=Hungarian MP denounced for 'Jewish list' call |publisher=Al Jazeera English |date=28 November 2012 |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> Around ten thousand Hungarians<ref>{{cite web|last=Than |first=Krisztina |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/02/us-hungary-protest-nazi-idUSBRE8B10CW20121202 |title=Thousands rally against far right in Hungary |publisher=Reuters |date=2 December 2012 |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> in Budapest protested against Gyöngyösi's anti-Semitic remarks. All major Hungarian political parties took part in the protest. At the protest, [[Attila Mesterházy]] the leader of [[Hungarian Socialist Party]], described Jobbik as a "fascist possessions virus", while 5th district of Budapest mayor [[Antal Rogán]], representing the governing conservative [[Fidesz]] party, described Jobbik as "evil".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://kanadaihirlap.com/2012/12/02/a-szelsojobboldal-egy-virus-amit-karantenba-kell-zarni-harcias-hangulat-a-budapesti-antifasiszta-tuntetesen/ |title=A szélsőjobboldal egy vírus amit karanténba kell zárni – Harcias hangulat a budapesti antifasiszta tüntetésen |publisher=Kanadaihirlap.com |date= |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> Jewish organizations responded to Gyöngyösi speech by describing it as a reintroduction of Nazism in Hungarian parliament and by describing Jobbik as a [[Nazism|Nazi]] party.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.zsido.com/cikkek/Nyilt_nacizmus_a_Parlament_falai_kozott/10/3210 |title=Hírek – Nyílt nácizmus a Parlament falai között |publisher=zsido.com |date= |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref>
In November 2012, while evaluating the latest news on the controversial Israeli military action in the Gaza strip, the party's deputy parliamentary leader, [[:hu:Gyöngyösi Márton|Márton Gyöngyösi]], statedin his speech in the Parliament: "I think such a conflict makes it timely to tally up people of Jewish ancestry who live here, especially in the Hungarian Parliament and the Hungarian government, who, indeed, pose a national security risk to Hungary."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4312434,00.html |title=Hungary: Far-right leader demands lists of Jews |publisher=Ynetnews.com |date=27 November 2012 |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> Márton Gyöngyösi admitted immediately after his speech that he had composed his sentence wrongly, as he thought of MPs with Israeli-Hungarian [[double citizenship]] and not of Jewish people. At the same time Gyöngyösi offered apology for the misunderstanding.<ref>https://mno.hu/belfold/a-futsalcsapattol-egesz-biztosan-megvalnanak-2403772 - "It was a wrongly composed sentence in the middle of a heated debate, I apologized for the next day.</ref> Despite this, political rivals of Jobbik started a harsh smear campaign, depicting Gyöngyösi as an extremist. As [[Al Jazeera]] reported, this led to "international condemnation of Nazi-style policies and a protest outside the legislature in Budapest.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2012/11/2012112722413396434.html |title=Hungarian MP denounced for 'Jewish list' call |publisher=Al Jazeera English |date=28 November 2012 |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> Around ten thousand Hungarians<ref>{{cite web|last=Than |first=Krisztina |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/02/us-hungary-protest-nazi-idUSBRE8B10CW20121202 |title=Thousands rally against far right in Hungary |publisher=Reuters |date=2 December 2012 |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> in Budapest protested against Gyöngyösi's anti-Semitic remarks. All major Hungarian political parties took part in the protest. At the protest, [[Attila Mesterházy]] the leader of the successor of the state party of the communist era, the [[Hungarian Socialist Party]], described Jobbik as a "fascist possessions virus", while 5th district of Budapest mayor [[Antal Rogán]], representing the governing [[Fidesz]] party, described Jobbik as "evil".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://kanadaihirlap.com/2012/12/02/a-szelsojobboldal-egy-virus-amit-karantenba-kell-zarni-harcias-hangulat-a-budapesti-antifasiszta-tuntetesen/ |title=A szélsőjobboldal egy vírus amit karanténba kell zárni – Harcias hangulat a budapesti antifasiszta tüntetésen |publisher=Kanadaihirlap.com |date= |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref> Jewish organizations, ignoring Gyöngyösi's apology and correction, responded to Gyöngyösi speech by describing it as a reintroduction of Nazism in Hungarian parliament and by describing Jobbik as a [[Nazism|Nazi]] party.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.zsido.com/cikkek/Nyilt_nacizmus_a_Parlament_falai_kozott/10/3210 |title=Hírek – Nyílt nácizmus a Parlament falai között |publisher=zsido.com |date= |accessdate=2013-08-25}}</ref>


In 2014 Tibor Ágoston, the deputy chairman of Jobbik's [[Debrecen]] and [[Hajdú-Bihar County]] organization, referred to the Holocaust as the "holoscam". Tamás Horovitz, the chairman of the Debrecen Jewish Congregation and the mayor of Debrecen, [[Lajos Kósa]], condemned Ágoston’s remarks.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.atv.hu/belfold/20140212-holokamurol-beszelt-a-jobbik-kepviseloje |title="Holokamuról" beszélt a Jobbik képviselője |publisher=atv.hu |date=12 February 2014 |accessdate=2014-02-15}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mazsihisz.hu/2014/02/14/kosa-lajos-elhatarolodik-a-jobbikos-kepviselo-holokausztra-tett-kijelenteseitol-6831.html |title=Kósa Lajos elhatárolódik a Jobbikos képviselő holokausztra tett kijelentéseitől |publisher=mazsihisz.hu |date=14 February 2014 |accessdate=2014-02-15}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.politics.hu/20140213/jewish-leader-condemns-jobbik-politicians-holocaust-remarks/ |title=Jewish leader condemns Jobbik politician’s Holocaust remarks |publisher=politics.hu |date=13 February 2014 |accessdate=2014-02-15}}</ref>
In 2014 Tibor Ágoston, the deputy chairman of Jobbik's [[Debrecen]] and [[Hajdú-Bihar County]] organization, referred to the Holocaust as the "holoscam". Tamás Horovitz, the chairman of the Debrecen Jewish Congregation and the mayor of Debrecen, [[Lajos Kósa]], condemned Ágoston’s remarks.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.atv.hu/belfold/20140212-holokamurol-beszelt-a-jobbik-kepviseloje |title="Holokamuról" beszélt a Jobbik képviselője |publisher=atv.hu |date=12 February 2014 |accessdate=2014-02-15}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mazsihisz.hu/2014/02/14/kosa-lajos-elhatarolodik-a-jobbikos-kepviselo-holokausztra-tett-kijelenteseitol-6831.html |title=Kósa Lajos elhatárolódik a Jobbikos képviselő holokausztra tett kijelentéseitől |publisher=mazsihisz.hu |date=14 February 2014 |accessdate=2014-02-15}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.politics.hu/20140213/jewish-leader-condemns-jobbik-politicians-holocaust-remarks/ |title=Jewish leader condemns Jobbik politician’s Holocaust remarks |publisher=politics.hu |date=13 February 2014 |accessdate=2014-02-15}}</ref> Later Ágoston harshly criticized Gábor Vona for not supporting Előd Novák and cutting ties with the so-called "radicals" in the party.<ref>https://vs.hu/kozelet/osszes/egy-debreceni-jobbikos-mar-fellazadt-vona-ellen-0421 - "One Jobbik member from Debrecen has already stood up against Vona"</ref>


In 2015 [[deputy leader]] [[Előd Novák]] posted to his social media account on Facebook a picture of himself and his family next to a separate image of Rikardo Racz, the first newborn in Hungary of the year who was born to a [[Romani people|Romani]] family. In a comment on the pictures, he stated that the population of Hungarians would become a minority and suggested that the Romani population is the biggest problem facing Hungary. Novák's remarks were both condemned and supported. Novák would later respond to the issue by refusing to apologize and suggested that the family should apologize to him.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-31168246|title=The baby that divided a nation|publisher=[[BBC News]]|date=8 February 2015|accessdate=2015-02-09}}</ref>
In 2015 [[deputy leader]] [[Előd Novák]] posted to his social media account on Facebook a picture of himself and his family next to a separate image of Rikardo Racz, the first newborn in Hungary of the year who was born to a [[Romani people|Romani]] family. In a comment on the pictures, he stated that the population of Hungarians would become a minority and suggested that the Romani population is the biggest problem facing Hungary. Novák's remarks were both condemned and supported. Novák would later respond to the issue by refusing to apologize and suggested that the family should apologize to him.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-31168246|title=The baby that divided a nation|publisher=[[BBC News]]|date=8 February 2015|accessdate=2015-02-09}}</ref> Előd Novák was forced by the party's parliamentary group to resign from his position as an MP in 2016.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://hungarytoday.hu/news/hardliner-mp-elod-novak-kicked-jobbiks-parliamentary-group-11164|title=Hardliner MP Előd Novák Kicked Out Of Jobbik's Parliamentary Group - Hungary Today|work=Hungary Today|access-date=2017-10-20|language=en-US}}</ref> Now, he is a vocal critic of Jobbik's new policies.


===World Jewish Congress Protest===
===World Jewish Congress Protest===
[[File:Jobbik-NewHungarianGuard-May2013.jpg|thumb|150px|Members of the New Hungarian Guard stand at a Jobbik rally against a gathering of the [[World Jewish Congress]] in Budapest, 4 May 2013]]
[[File:Jobbik-NewHungarianGuard-May2013.jpg|thumb|150px|Members of the New Hungarian Guard stand at a Jobbik rally against a gathering of the [[World Jewish Congress]] in Budapest, 4 May 2013]]
On 4 May 2013, Jobbik members protested against the [[World Jewish Congress]] in [[Budapest]], claiming the protest was against "a Jewish attempt to buy up [[Hungary]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22413301|title=Jobbik rally against World Jewish Congress in Budapest|date=4 May 2013}}</ref> Jobbik MP Enikő Hegedűs vociferously condemned both Israel and Jews at the rally as her husband, Lóránt Hegedűs Jr., stood nearby.<ref name="churches back jews" /> An ordained minister in the [[Reformed Church in Hungary]], Lóránt Hegedűs himself had served in the National Assembly as an MP of the far-right nationalist [[Hungarian Justice and Life Party]] from 1998 to 2002.<ref name="extremists religion">{{cite journal|last=Odehnal |first=Bernhard |year=2011 |title=Right wing extremist groups and religion in Central Europe |journal=Working papers 2011 |publisher=Institute for Comparative Political Research |location=Brno |url=http://ispo.fss.muni.cz/uploads/2download/prezentace2/Referat_Rechts.pdf }}</ref> He invited Holocaust denier [[David Irving]] to his Budapest church in 2007 as a "special guest",<ref name="extremists religion" /> and has also been accused of anti-Semitism on several occasions for statements he has made about Jews at Jobbik events. At a 2011 rally, he claimed that Jews orchestrated World War II and controlled the international media,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ejpress.org/article/55114|title=An ostracized Hungarian party embraces Iran|last=Foxman|first=Abraham H.|date=15 December 2011|publisher=European Jewish Press|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref> and a year prior had alleged that the Hungarian government was secretly cooperating with [[Mossad]] to facilitate an Israeli takeover of Hungary with the assistance of Hungarian Jews and mainstream churches.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.jpost.com/Christian-In-Israel/Features/The-alarming-rise-of-Jobbik|title=The alarming rise of Jobbik |last=Molnar|first=Laci|date=30 September 2010|work=Christian in Israel|publisher=Jerusalem Post|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref> After his wife's statement regarding the World Jewish Congress, the Reformed Church launched an inquiry into the minister's conduct, with presiding bishop [[Gusztáv Bölcskei]] denouncing Hegedűs's activism for Jobbik as "permanent provocation" which was incompatible with scripture.<ref name="churches back jews">{{cite news|url=http://blogs.reuters.com/faithworld/2013/05/14/christian-churches-back-jews-facing-anti-semitism-in-hungary/|title=Christian churches back Jews facing anti-Semitism in Hungary |last=Heneghan|first=Tom|date=14 May 2013|work=FaithWorld|publisher=Reuters|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref>
On 4 May 2013, Jobbik members protested against the [[World Jewish Congress]] in [[Budapest]], claiming the protest was against "a Jewish attempt to buy up [[Hungary]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22413301|title=Jobbik rally against World Jewish Congress in Budapest|date=4 May 2013}}</ref> Jobbik MP Enikő Hegedűs vociferously condemned both Israel and Jews at the rally as her husband, Lóránt Hegedűs Jr., stood nearby.<ref name="churches back jews" /> An ordained minister in the [[Reformed Church in Hungary]], Lóránt Hegedűs himself had served in the National Assembly as an MP of the far-right nationalist [[Hungarian Justice and Life Party]] from 1998 to 2002.<ref name="extremists religion">{{cite journal|last=Odehnal |first=Bernhard |year=2011 |title=Right wing extremist groups and religion in Central Europe |journal=Working papers 2011 |publisher=Institute for Comparative Political Research |location=Brno |url=http://ispo.fss.muni.cz/uploads/2download/prezentace2/Referat_Rechts.pdf }}</ref> He invited Holocaust denier [[David Irving]] to his Budapest church in 2007 as a "special guest",<ref name="extremists religion" /> and has also been accused of anti-Semitism on several occasions for statements he has made about Jews at Jobbik events. At a 2011 rally, he claimed that Jews orchestrated World War II and controlled the international media,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ejpress.org/article/55114|title=An ostracized Hungarian party embraces Iran|last=Foxman|first=Abraham H.|date=15 December 2011|publisher=European Jewish Press|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref> and a year prior had alleged that the Hungarian government was secretly cooperating with [[Mossad]] to facilitate an Israeli takeover of Hungary with the assistance of Hungarian Jews and mainstream churches.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.jpost.com/Christian-In-Israel/Features/The-alarming-rise-of-Jobbik|title=The alarming rise of Jobbik |last=Molnar|first=Laci|date=30 September 2010|work=Christian in Israel|publisher=Jerusalem Post|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref> After his wife's statement regarding the World Jewish Congress, the Reformed Church launched an inquiry into the minister's conduct, with presiding bishop [[Gusztáv Bölcskei]] denouncing Hegedűs's activism for Jobbik as "permanent provocation" which was incompatible with scripture.<ref name="churches back jews">{{cite news|url=http://blogs.reuters.com/faithworld/2013/05/14/christian-churches-back-jews-facing-anti-semitism-in-hungary/|title=Christian churches back Jews facing anti-Semitism in Hungary |last=Heneghan|first=Tom|date=14 May 2013|work=FaithWorld|publisher=Reuters|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref>

President of Jobbik Gábor Vona later clarified that he had criticized Zionism as a political idea and pointed out that he understood the Hungarian Jewish community had to survive such traumas during the 20th century that make dialogue very hard. At the same time he emphasized that he wanted to have harmonic relations with the Hungarian Jewish community.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://forward.com/news/world/362663/exclusive-in-first-talk-with-jewish-media-hungarys-far-right-leader-strikes/|title=Exclusive: In First Talk With Jewish Media, Hungary’s Far Right Leader Strikes A New Pose|work=The Forward|access-date=2017-10-20}}</ref>

=== The"[[Hanukkah|Hannukah]] case" ===
In December 2016 Gábor Vona, besides his Christmas greetings to the [[Christian Church|Christian churches]], as a gesture sent his greetings to his Jewish compatriots on the occasion of the [[Jewish holidays]]. The message of Vona raised controversy among Hungarian Jewish communities.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-hungary-jobbik/hungarys-jobbik-ditches-far-right-past-to-challenge-orban-in-2018-idUSKBN14V1PW|title=Hungary's Jobbik ditches far-right past to challenge Orban in 2018|date=Wed Jan 11 14:48:21 UTC 2017|work=Reuters|access-date=2017-10-26}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.szombat.org/hirek-lapszemle/vona-gabor-hanukai-udvozlete-meg-sokszor|title=Vona Gábor hanukai üdvözlete – még sokszor {{!}} Szombat Online|work=Szombat Online|access-date=2017-10-26|language=hu-HU}}</ref> Vona had already pointed out before that those, even party members, who had wanted to see Jobbik as a racist or anti-Semitic party had been wrong.However, Vona took responsibility for turning blind eyes in such situations earlier.<ref>http://www.atv.hu/belfold/20150910-vona-nem-akarok-mindenaron-miniszterelnok-lenni - For me, Jobbik has never been a far-right, fascistic, national socialist, racist or anti-Semitic party. If such people had joined us, it might have happened because of exaltation or mistake. In this, my responsibility, or the responsibility of the leaders of the party is that we just turned blind eye to these phenomena and thought that the time will solve the problem.</ref>


===Warnings against "EU Slavery" and ethnic shift in Hungary===
===Warnings against "EU Slavery" and ethnic shift in Hungary===
Gábor Vona earlier said that, Hungarians became slaves because the European Union had only wanted Hungary to enter the EU because of its cheap workforce.<ref name="BPtimes">{{cite web|url=http://budapesttimes.hu/2011/03/23/vona-hungarians-are-slaves-and-soon-to-be-outnumbered/ |title=Vona: Hungarians are slaves and soon to be outnumbered |publisher=budapesttimes.hu |date=23 March 2014 |accessdate=2014-04-01}}</ref> Vona also stated that "the number of Hungarians continues to fall while the gypsy population grows ever larger. This was not racism but a real social and economic problem. Anyone who doesn’t understand this is not normal."<ref name="BPtimes" />
{{main|Antiziganism}}
According to Gábor Vona, Hungarians became slaves because the European Union had only wanted Hungary to enter the EU because of its cheap workforce.<ref name="BPtimes">{{cite web|url=http://budapesttimes.hu/2011/03/23/vona-hungarians-are-slaves-and-soon-to-be-outnumbered/ |title=Vona: Hungarians are slaves and soon to be outnumbered |publisher=budapesttimes.hu |date=23 March 2014 |accessdate=2014-04-01}}</ref> Vona also stated that "the number of Hungarians continues to fall while the gypsy population grows ever larger. This was not racism but a real social and economic problem. Anyone who doesn’t understand this is not normal."<ref name="BPtimes" />


In a 2016 inverview, Vona announced that he believes the EU also has some advantages.<ref>https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-06-02/hungary-s-jobbik-abandons-push-to-leave-eu-vona-tells-inforadio</ref>
In a 2016 inverview, Vona announced that he believes the EU also has some advantages.<ref>https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-06-02/hungary-s-jobbik-abandons-push-to-leave-eu-vona-tells-inforadio</ref>

In his 2017 interview Márton Gyöngyösi, deputy leader of the party's parliamentary group, pointed out that Jobbik seeks for the constructive reform of the European Union.<ref>https://mno.hu/belfold/a-futsalcsapattol-egesz-biztosan-megvalnanak-2403772 -"Our scepticism towards the EU was actually focusing on the policies, followed in the past decades, that aim a federalised Europe. This is what we even today reject. At this point, difference between the views of Jobbik and Fidesz is clearly visible. Both political forces confront with the EU, but Fidesz is now totally isolated in this dispute and a picture emerge, that Fidesz would lead out our country from the EU, Jobbik talks about constructive suggestions concerning the reform of the EU."</ref> In addition, Gyöngyösi also said that in order to have a more harmonized EU, maybe some national competencies, such as labor conditions and wage regulations can be reconsidered.


===Attempts to criminalize promotion of "sexual deviancy"===
===Attempts to criminalize promotion of "sexual deviancy"===
In April 2012, Jobbik tried to introduce a bill into the Hungarian parliament that would change the national constitution to allegedly "protect public morals and the mental health of the young generations" by banning the popularization of "sexual deviancy". The legislation was drafted by party spokesman Ádám Mírkóczki. This was to target "homosexuality, sex changes, transvestitism, bisexuality and paedophile behaviour". The proposed amendments would criminalise anyone who "popularizes their sexual relations—deviancy—with another person of the same sex, or other disturbances of sexual behaviour, before the wider public". The penalty would be three years in prison, or five years if 'popularizing' is done in front of minors. The draft legislation ultimately failed to pass.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://budapesttimes.hu/2012/04/19/jobbik-seeks-gay-propaganda-ban/ |title=Jobbik seeks ‘gay propaganda’ ban |first=R. |last=Kinga |work=[[The Budapest Times]] |date=19 April 2012 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref>
Jobbik, as a conservative party, does not prefer policies which promote lifestyles different than the Christian-conservative model. The party maintains that the most important social unit is the [[traditional family]]. In April 2012, Jobbik tried to introduce a bill into the Hungarian parliament that would change the national constitution to allegedly "protect public morals and the mental health of the young generations" by banning the popularization of "sexual deviancy". The legislation was drafted by party spokesman Ádám Mirkóczki. This was to target "homosexuality, sex changes, transvestitism, bisexuality and paedophile behaviour". The proposed amendments would criminalise anyone who "popularizes their sexual relations—deviancy—with another person of the same sex, or other disturbances of sexual behaviour, before the wider public". The penalty would be three years in prison, or five years if 'popularizing' is done in front of minors. The draft legislation ultimately failed to pass.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://budapesttimes.hu/2012/04/19/jobbik-seeks-gay-propaganda-ban/ |title=Jobbik seeks ‘gay propaganda’ ban |first=R. |last=Kinga |work=[[The Budapest Times]] |date=19 April 2012 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref> At the same time, Jobbik has never supported any repressive measures on individuals.<ref>https://mno.hu/belfold/duro-dora-a-jobbik-orulne-a-meleg-szavazatoknak-is-2423588 - As she (MP Dóra Dúró) told, Jobbik would like to represent all the Hungarian citizens and expects support from those, who can identify themselves with the party's program. To the question whether the same applies for homosexuals, too, she responded: if someone has such sexual orientation, but thinks that Jobbik represents his or her interests, the party is glad to receive the support.</ref> According to the policies of the party, different sexual orientations are personal matters.


==Other issues==
==Other issues==


===Support for Miklós Horthy===
===Support for Miklós Horthy===
On 3 November 2013, Márton Gyöngyösi and other Jobbik members unveiled a bronze bust of [[Miklós Horthy]], a nationalist admiral who served as [[Regent of Hungary]] from 1920 to 1944, in front of the "Church of Homecoming" in downtown Budapest's [[Liberty Square (Budapest)|Liberty Square]], where Lóránt Hegedűs serves as pastor.<ref name="bishop alarmed" /> The ceremony drew strong public and official condemnations over the legacy of Horthy, who forged close—if [[Miklós Horthy#Uneasy alliance|uneasy]]—ties with [[Adolf Hitler]] from the 1930s and [[Hungary in World War II|led Hungary]] into [[World War II]] in 1941 on the side of the [[Axis powers]] (which the country had officially [[Tripartite Pact#Hungary|joined]] the previous year). Many Hungarians thus see Horthy as a source of deep national shame and Nazi collaborator, complicit in the murder of half a million Hungarian Jews in [[History of the Jews in Hungary#The Holocaust|the Holocaust in Hungary]]. Others, however, revere him as a national hero, ostensibly for guiding the country to stability in its chaotic [[Hungary between the World Wars|interwar period]]—at the ceremony, Gyöngyösi proclaimed Horthy "the greatest Hungarian statesman of the 20th century".<ref name="reuters horthy">{{cite news|url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/11/03/uk-hungary-farright-horthy-protest-idUKBRE9A20BF20131103|title=Hungarian far-right sparks protests as it commemorates wartime leader|last=Dunai|first=Márton|publisher=Reuters UK|date=3 November 2013|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref>
In Hungary it is a very important and complex issue to deal with the [[interwar period]] and the legacy of the one-time governor of Hungary, [[Miklós Horthy]]. Jobbik, like other right and centre-right parties is Hungary, supports a balanced view, appreciating the positive elements of the consolidation after the [[World War I]] and Trianon trauma. On 3 November 2013, Márton Gyöngyösi and other Jobbik members unveiled a bronze bust of [[Miklós Horthy]], a nationalist admiral who served as [[Regent of Hungary]] from 1920 to 1944, in front of the "Church of Homecoming" in downtown Budapest's [[Liberty Square (Budapest)|Liberty Square]], where Lóránt Hegedűs serves as pastor.<ref name="bishop alarmed" /> The ceremony drew strong public and official condemnations over the legacy of Horthy, who [[Hungary in World War II|led Hungary]] into [[World War II]] in 1941 on the side of the [[Axis powers]] (which the country had officially [[Tripartite Pact#Hungary|joined]] the previous year). Many Hungarians thus see Horthy as a source of deep national shame and Nazi collaborator, complicit in the murder of half a million Hungarian Jews in [[History of the Jews in Hungary#The Holocaust|the Holocaust in Hungary]]. Others, however, revere him as a national hero, ostensibly for guiding the country to stability in its chaotic [[Hungary between the World Wars|interwar period]]—at the ceremony, Gyöngyösi proclaimed Horthy "the greatest Hungarian statesman of the 20th century".<ref name="reuters horthy">{{cite news|url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/11/03/uk-hungary-farright-horthy-protest-idUKBRE9A20BF20131103|title=Hungarian far-right sparks protests as it commemorates wartime leader|last=Dunai|first=Márton|publisher=Reuters UK|date=3 November 2013|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref>


Several thousand individuals—some of whom had pinned [[Yellow badge|yellow Stars of David]] on their clothing came out to protest against the statue, and were met by a smaller crowd of far right protesters near the church who responded with anti-Semitic and racist slurs. Mayor Antal Rogán condemned Jobbik's move as a "political provocation" that would allow the "western European left-wing press" to unfairly characterise Hungary as being plagued by anti-Semitic extremists. Hegedűs, who had already hung a portrait of Horthy by his church's entrance well prior to the statue's installation,<ref name="extremists religion" /> defended Horthy's legacy to journalists after the unveiling, calling it "unjust and historically wrong" to implicate the former leader in crimes against humanity because he was not prosecuted at the [[Nuremberg trials]].<ref name="reuters horthy" /> In light of the furore over the statue, church officials announced they would launch another official probe into Hegedűs's political activities.<ref name="bishop alarmed">{{cite news|url=https://blogs.wsj.com/emergingeurope/2013/11/05/hungarian-bishop-alarmed-by-nazi-allys-monument/|title=Hungarian Bishop Alarmed by Nazi Ally’s Monument|last=Feher|first=Margit|date=5 November 2013|work=Emerging Europe|publisher=The Wall Street Journal|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref>
Several thousand individuals—some of whom had pinned [[Yellow badge|yellow Stars of David]] on their clothing came out to protest against the statue, and were met by a smaller crowd of far right protesters near the church who responded with anti-Semitic and racist slurs. Mayor Antal Rogán condemned Jobbik's move as a "political provocation" that would allow the "western European left-wing press" to unfairly characterise Hungary as being plagued by anti-Semitic extremists. Hegedűs, who had already hung a portrait of Horthy by his church's entrance well prior to the statue's installation,<ref name="extremists religion" /> defended Horthy's legacy to journalists after the unveiling, calling it "unjust and historically wrong" to implicate the former leader in crimes against humanity because he was suspected not prosecuted at the [[Nuremberg trials]].<ref name="reuters horthy" /> In light of the furore over the statue, church officials announced they would launch another official probe into Hegedűs's political activities.<ref name="bishop alarmed">{{cite news|url=https://blogs.wsj.com/emergingeurope/2013/11/05/hungarian-bishop-alarmed-by-nazi-allys-monument/|title=Hungarian Bishop Alarmed by Nazi Ally’s Monument|last=Feher|first=Margit|date=5 November 2013|work=Emerging Europe|publisher=The Wall Street Journal|accessdate=15 December 2013}}</ref>


==Electoral performance==
==Electoral performance==


===Growth and electoral success===
===Growth and electoral success===
[[File:Morvai and Vona on the campaign trail.jpg|thumb|right|225px|[[Krisztina Morvai]], who successfully headed the party's [[European Parliament election, 2009 (Hungary)|2009 EP]] candidate list; and [[Gábor Vona]] the Jobbik party chairman; during their nationwide tour.]]
The party faced its first electoral test with the coming of the [[European Parliament election, 2009|2009 European parliamentary elections]]. The election's results shocked their opponents:<ref>{{cite web | url=http://hungarianspectrum.wordpress.com/2009/06/07/european-parliamentary-elections-hungary/ | title=European parliamentary elections: Hungary | publisher=[[Hungarian Spectrum]] | date=2009-06-07 | last=Balogh | first=Eva}}</ref> with the party sending three [[Member of the European Parliament|MEPs]] to [[European Parliament|Strasbourg]]; coming close to equal in number of votes with the governing [[Hungarian Socialist Party]] (MSZP) while eliminating their liberal coalition partner [[Alliance of Free Democrats]] (SZDSZ), to become the nation's third largest party.<ref name="europarl.europa.eu">{{cite web |title=Results of the 2009 European elections: Hungary |url=http://www.europarl.europa.eu/parliament/archive/elections2009/en/hungary_en.html |publisher=[www.europarl.europa.eu] |date=2009-07-08}}</ref>
The party faced its first electoral test with the coming of the [[European Parliament election, 2009|2009 European parliamentary elections]]. The election's results shocked their opponents:<ref>{{cite web | url=http://hungarianspectrum.wordpress.com/2009/06/07/european-parliamentary-elections-hungary/ | title=European parliamentary elections: Hungary | publisher=[[Hungarian Spectrum]] | date=2009-06-07 | last=Balogh | first=Eva}}</ref> with the party sending three [[Member of the European Parliament|MEPs]] to [[European Parliament|Strasbourg]]; coming close to equal in number of votes with the governing [[Hungarian Socialist Party]] (MSZP) while eliminating their liberal coalition partner [[Alliance of Free Democrats]] (SZDSZ), to become the nation's third largest party.<ref name="europarl.europa.eu">{{cite web |title=Results of the 2009 European elections: Hungary |url=http://www.europarl.europa.eu/parliament/archive/elections2009/en/hungary_en.html |publisher=[www.europarl.europa.eu] |date=2009-07-08}}</ref>


In London on 16 May 2008, the delegation of Jobbik's Committee of Foreign Affairs met [[Nick Griffin]], chairman of the [[British National Party]]. They discussed cooperation between the two parties, and the elections for the European Parliament. Griffin spoke at the party rally in August 2008, while former vice-president Zoltán Füzessy is presently resident in [[Gravesend]], [[Kent]], England.<ref name="Sun">{{cite news|url=http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article1911033.ece|title=Top Euro Nazi's hate site run from terraced house … in Gravesend|work=The Sun |date=2008-11-10 |accessdate=2008-11-10 |location=London |first=Tom |last=Wells}}</ref>
In London on 16 May 2008, the delegation of Jobbik's Committee of Foreign Affairs met [[Nick Griffin]], chairman of the [[British National Party]]. They discussed cooperation between the two parties, and the elections for the European Parliament. Griffin spoke at the party rally in August 2008, while former vice-president Zoltán Füzessy is presently resident in [[Gravesend]], [[Kent]], England.<ref name="Sun">{{cite news|url=http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article1911033.ece|title=Top Euro Nazi's hate site run from terraced house … in Gravesend|work=The Sun |date=2008-11-10 |accessdate=2008-11-10 |location=London |first=Tom |last=Wells}}</ref>


The [[Alliance of European National Movements]] (AENM) was formed in Budapest on 24 October 2009. The alliance's founding members were ''Jobbik'' (the Alliance was established during their sixth party congress), France's [[National Front (France)|National Front]], UK's [[British National Party]] Italy's [[Tricolour Flame]], Sweden's [[National Democrats (Sweden)|National Democrats]] and Belgium's [[National Front (Belgium)|National Front]].<ref>{{Citation |title=European nationalist parties form alliance |url=http://www.etaiwannews.com/etn/news_content.php?id=1090191&lang=eng_news |publisher=[[Taiwan News]] (source: [[Associated Press]]) |date=2009-10-24 |quote=Hungary's Jobbik, France's National Front, Italy's Three-Color Flame, Sweden's National Democrats and Belgium's National Front formed the Alliance of European National Movements}}</ref> Since January 2014 [[Béla Kovács (politician, 1960)|Béla Kovács]] has been its president.<ref>{{cite web|title=JOBBIK, nueva presidencia de la AEMN en su Asamblea General|url=http://www.tribunadeeuropa.com/?p=18105|website=Tribuna de Europa: La Voz del Pueblo Español|accessdate=24 March 2015|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140108211726/http://www.tribunadeeuropa.com/?p=18105|archivedate=2014-01-08|language=Spanish|date=2014-01-03}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://aemn.info/?page_id=46 |title=Presidency |work=Alliance of European National Movements |year=2014 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref>
The [[Alliance of European National Movements]] (AENM) was formed in Budapest on 24 October 2009. The alliance's founding members were ''Jobbik'' (the Alliance was established during their sixth party congress), France's [[National Front (France)|National Front]], UK's [[British National Party]] Italy's [[Tricolour Flame]], Sweden's [[National Democrats (Sweden)|National Democrats]] and Belgium's [[National Front (Belgium)|National Front]].<ref>{{Citation |title=European nationalist parties form alliance |url=http://www.etaiwannews.com/etn/news_content.php?id=1090191&lang=eng_news |publisher=[[Taiwan News]] (source: [[Associated Press]]) |date=2009-10-24 |quote=Hungary's Jobbik, France's National Front, Italy's Three-Color Flame, Sweden's National Democrats and Belgium's National Front formed the Alliance of European National Movements}}</ref> Since January 2014 [[Béla Kovács (politician, 1960)|Béla Kovács]] has been its president.<ref>{{cite web|title=JOBBIK, nueva presidencia de la AEMN en su Asamblea General|url=http://www.tribunadeeuropa.com/?p=18105|website=Tribuna de Europa: La Voz del Pueblo Español|accessdate=24 March 2015|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140108211726/http://www.tribunadeeuropa.com/?p=18105|archivedate=2014-01-08|language=Spanish|date=2014-01-03}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://aemn.info/?page_id=46 |title=Presidency |work=Alliance of European National Movements |year=2014 |accessdate=24 October 2014}}</ref> Since then Jobbik officialy quit AENM and cut all ties with the members of the alliance.


On 12 April 2015, Jobbik's Lajos Rig defeated the [[Fidesz]] candidate in a parliamentary by-election in [[Veszprém County]]. It was the second by-election lost by Fidesz after the national 2014 elections, leaving the ruling Fidesz-KDNP coalition two short of the parliamentary supermajority (''kétharmad'').<ref>{{cite news|last1=Dull|first1=Szabolcs|title=Győzött a Jobbik a tapolcai választáson|url=http://index.hu/belfold/2015/04/12/idokozi_valasztas_ajka_sumeg_tapolca_parlament/|accessdate=12 April 2015|publisher=Index.hu}}</ref>
On 12 April 2015, Jobbik's Lajos Rig defeated the [[Fidesz]] candidate in a parliamentary by-election in [[Veszprém County]]. It was the second by-election lost by Fidesz after the national 2014 elections, leaving the ruling Fidesz-KDNP coalition two short of the parliamentary supermajority (''kétharmad'').<ref>{{cite news|last1=Dull|first1=Szabolcs|title=Győzött a Jobbik a tapolcai választáson|url=http://index.hu/belfold/2015/04/12/idokozi_valasztas_ajka_sumeg_tapolca_parlament/|accessdate=12 April 2015|publisher=Index.hu}}</ref>
[[File:Gabor vona sympathizer.jpg|left|thumb|327x327px|Gábor Vona on his nationwide tour with Jobbik voters (2017)]]
On 14 March 2017 Jobbik started close cooperation with Bulgarian [[IMRO – Bulgarian National Movement|VMRO]], [[Conservative People's Party of Estonia|Estonian Conservative People's Party]] and Croatian GO! as well as with trade unions, such as the Polish [[Solidarność 80]], in the framework of the Wage Union European Citizens' Initiative.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-hungary-jobbik-idUKKBN18Q1CY|title=Hungary's opposition Jobbik to campaign on higher wages in 2018 election|last=Editorial|first=Reuters|work=U.K.|access-date=2017-10-17|language=en-GB}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.jobbik.com/vona_and_gyongyosis_sofia_visit_reveals_launch_date_of_signature_collection_for_the_wage_union|title=Vona and Gyöngyösi's Sofia visit reveals launch date of signature collection for the Wage Union|date=2017-07-12|work=jobbik.com|access-date=2017-10-17|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://jobbik.com/croatia_launches_collection_of_signatures_for_wage_union|title=Croatia launches collection of signatures for Wage Union|date=2017-09-25|work=jobbik.com|access-date=2017-10-17|language=en}}</ref>


===Hungarian Parliamentary Elections 2014===
===Hungarian Parliamentary Elections 2014===
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*[http://www.jobbik.hu/ Official website] (Hungarian)
*[http://www.jobbik.hu/ Official website] (Hungarian)
*[http://www.jobbik.com/ Official website] (English)
*[http://www.jobbik.com/ Official website] (English)
*[http://jobbik.com/temp/Jobbik-RADICALCHANGE2010.pdf/ Electoral Manifesto] (English)
*[http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9833313 Changing of the Garda] An article in The Economist about the Hungarian far right
*[http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9833313 Changing of the Garda] An article in The Economist about the Hungarian far right
*[http://jobbik.hu/index.php?oldal=hir&hirkat_id=20&hir_id=2866 Deed of Foundation] (Hungarian)
*[http://jobbik.hu/index.php?oldal=hir&hirkat_id=20&hir_id=2866 Deed of Foundation] (Hungarian)
*[http://hvg.hu/english/20051017nationalistright.aspx "Third way" platform: The nationalist right gets together] (HVG)
*[http://hvg.hu/english/20051017nationalistright.aspx "Third way" platform: The nationalist right gets together] (HVG)
{{Hungarian political parties}}
{{Hungarian political parties}}
{{Alliance of European National Movements}}
{{Hungarian far right}}
{{Hungarian far right}}



Revision as of 14:15, 3 November 2017

Movement for a Better Hungary
Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom
LeaderGábor Vona
Parliamentary leaderJános Volner
Vice PresidentsErik Fülöp
Dávid Janiczak
Tamás Sneider
László Toroczkai
János Volner
Dániel Z. Kárpát
Founded24 October 2003
Headquarters1113 Budapest, Villányi út 20/A
Youth wingJobbik Young Section
Paramilitary wingMagyar Gárda[1][2][3][4]
(2007–2009)
Membership17,927 (2016)[5]
IdeologyHungarian nationalism[6]
Hungarian Turanism[7][8]
National conservatism[9]
Social conservatism[10]
Right-wing populism[11]
Economic nationalism[12]
Soft Euroscepticism[13]
Anti-globalism[14][15]
Political positionRight-wing[16][17]
to far-right[18][19][20]
European affiliationnone
European Parliament groupNon-Inscrits
International affiliationNone
ColoursRed, white and green
National Assembly
24 / 199
European Parliament
3 / 21
County Assemblies
81 / 419
Website
www.jobbik.hu (Hungarian)
www.jobbik.com (English)

Jobbik, the Movement for a Better Hungary (Hungarian: Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom), commonly known as Jobbik (pronounced [ˈjobːik]), is a Hungarian conservative party[21][22] with radical and nationalist[23][24] roots. At its beginnings the party described itself as "a principled, conservative and radically patriotic Christian party", whose "fundamental purpose" is the protection of "Hungarian values and interests."[25] By contrast, due to their earlier anti-establishment stance, the party has been described by others[who?] as an "antisemitic organization".[26]

Since 2014 Jobbik, with regard to its growing popularity, has started to re-define itself as a conservative people's party and changed the controversial elements of its communication. According to the party's Manifesto on the guidelines of a future government, Jobbik represents all Hungarian citizens and people and aims to build a modern national identity, while rejecting the chauvinism of the 20th century.

After the Hungarian parliamentary elections on 6 April 2014, the party polled 1,020,476 votes, securing 20.54% of the total, making them Hungary's third largest party in the National Assembly.

Name

The Movement for a Better Hungary more commonly goes under its abbreviated name Jobbik (pronounced [ˈjobːik]), which is in fact a play on words. The word jobb in Hungarian has two meanings, the adjective for "better" and the direction "right"; the comparative Jobbik therefore means both "the more preferable choice" and "more to the right". This is similar to the English phrase "right choice", which could mean both "a choice on the right side of the political spectrum" and "a correct choice".

Platform and ideology

Currently, the party describes itself as a modern conservative people's party.[27]

Earlier, the party often defined itself as "a principled, conservative and radically patriotic Christian party", whose "fundamental purpose" was the protection of "Hungarian values and interests".[25] Since then, Jobbik has implemented major changes in its program and policies, due to its growing popularity and broadening supporter groups. Earlier Jobbik's ideology has been described by political scholars as right-wing populist, whose strategy "relies on a combination of ethno-nationalism with anti-elitist populist rhetoric and a radical critique of existing political institutions".[28][29] For its part, Jobbik rejects the common classification of the political spectrum in left and right. The party sees itself as patriotic.[30] The party has always rejected the term 'far-right', and instead labeled itself as 'radical right-wing'. It has also criticised media companies for labelling them as 'far-right' and has threatened to take action towards those who do.[31] In 2014, the Supreme Court of Hungary ruled that Jobbik cannot be labeled "far-right" in any domestic radio or television transmissions, as this would constitute an opinion because Jobbik has refuted the 'far-right' label.[32]

Since 2014 the party has not used the "radical right-wing" term to define itself, stating that Jobbik aims to represent all Hungarian people, not exclusively the right-wing of the political spectrum.

At its beginnings, Jobbik described itself as rejecting "global capitalism"[33][34] and European Union, because they felt disappointed with the conditions of the Hungarian EU accession.[35] While the party previously also opposed Zionism,[36][37] the party's leader, Gabor Vona, stated in February 2017 that he has "never questioned Israel’s existence"[38] and that the party supports a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict.[39] At some point the party adheres to Pan-Turanism, an ideology that asserts that Hungarians originate from the Ural–Altaic race.[7][8]

According to Gábor Vona, the president of Jobbik, after 2014 the party has grown out of its "adolescence" and reached its adulthood. Since then Jobbik defines itself as a national people's party and has significantly changed its views on the European Union, while in the internal politics the party has started to emphasize the opening towards the different groups of the Hungarian society.[40][41] At the same time Gábor Vona took responsibility for the earlier, misunderstandable remarks of the party and offered apology for those who were unintentionally offended by previous statements.[42]

Jobbik, according to the recent remarks from the party, does not regard ideological issues as a primary goal anymore but puts focus on the elimination of social tensions and controversies as well as on the fight against the growing corruption in the public sphere and administration.[43]

Modern conservativism

In summer of 2016 Gábor Vona, the president of Jobbik, declared a new style of politics, called "modern conservativism" with the aim to exceed the pointless debates between the right- and the left-wing and to induct cooperation among Hungarians with different political backgrounds. According to Vona, the goal of "modern conservativism" is, beyond politics, to build a society that can, by its proactivity, be a basis for a more democratic political functioning. As a historical precedent, he referred to the ideals of István Széchenyi, who is considered as one of the greatest statesmen of the Hungarian history.[44][45]

Relation to the European Union

Since its formation, Jobbik had a strongly critical stance towards the European Union. The party regarded the accession of Hungary a failure, and looked on the EU as an organization that did not serve the interests of the Hungarians. However, even in this period, the party did not refused the idea of a radically reformed European confederation.[46] After the Brexit and the continuous debates on the future of the European Union, the party has reassessed its views on the EU and started to emphasize that by adequate policies a reform of the EU, that could make the organization advantageous for the European nations, is possible.[47] According to Jobbik, Hungary should join the Eurozone as soon as possible since it is a not a political but an economic question. On his press conference on 27 November 2017 the president of the party, Gábor Vona told, if some conditions were fulfilled Jobbik could even support further deepening of the EU.[48]

Wage Union

Main article: Wage Union

Jobbik considers the issue of decreasing the differences between the regions of the EU especially important. Thus, they party sees a strong convergence of the countries as an important goal.[49] Reducing the economic differences between the Western and the Eastern part of the European Union and the development of the Eastern regions are key elements of the new EU-policy of Jobbik. According to the party, for the lack of development Eastern Central European governments and the European Union, that has turned a blind eye on corruption, are equally responsible. Therefore Jobbik played a leading role in the formation of the Wage Union European Citizens' Initiative, that started its work on 14 March 2017 with the participation of representatives from 8 Central European countries.[50][51]

Economy

At its beginnings Jobbik rejected globalised capitalism, and the influence of foreign investors in Hungary.[52] In the past, Jobbik has specifically opposed aggressive Israeli investment in Hungary and selling out of the country. On 4 May 2013, protesting the World Jewish Congress's choice to locate their 2013 congress in Budapest, party chairman Gabor Vona said, "The Israeli conquerors, these investors, should look for another country in the world for themselves because Hungary is not for sale",[53] responding to a highly controversial 10 October 2007 speech of Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres. Peres' statement that "from such a small country as ours it is almost amazing, that we are buying up Manhattan, Hungary, Romania and Poland"[54] inflicted a heated debate in the Hungarian public discourse and the Israeli diplomacy had to explain the controversial words several times.[55]

According to the 2017 Manifesto on the party's guidelines, an innovative economic policy should be followed, that's goal is to find the opportunities in the global economy. An increasingly important point of Jobbik's economic policy is the creation of a more competitive national economy that is able to provide higher wages. The party aims to support SMEs[56] and a balanced development with multinational companies.[57]

Public order

The party argues that the national police should be greatly strengthened and, along with the Fidesz, supports introducing a "three strikes law".[58] However, political rivals of Jobbik accused Jobbik that its connections to the falsely depicted and now-banned Magyar Gárda militia have raised concerns about the party's commitment to ensuring peace and order within Hungarian society, even within the party.

Jobbik supports bringing back the death penalty and have also promised to restore capital punishment if they come to power.[59][60][61]

Minority rights and demands for territorial autonomy for Hungarians outside of Hungary

Hungarian losses of territory in the Treaty of Trianon

Due to the fact that large Hungarian population live outside of Hungary as ethnic minorities, their wellbeing has great importance for Jobbik. The party therefore demands minority rights for these groups in accordance with the Western European standards. As the waste majority of the current Hungarian political parties, the party demands the reestablishment of the once existing "territorial autonomy" in the Székely Land in Romania and desires to make Carpathian Ruthenia an independent Hungarian district[62] referring to the existing example of South Tyrol[63][64]. Jobbik is frequently accused to call for a return to pre-Treaty of Trianon borders in political rhetoric.[65] However, in fact, Jobbik never suggested forceful changing of borders and believes that territorial and cultural autonomy in a European Union which respects minority rights is the ultimate solution.[66][67]

A quarter of ethnic Hungarians live outside the country.[68] Many times they face discrimination[69] [70][71]because of their ethnicity, that causes regular diplomatic debates among Hungary and its neighbors. Jobbik dedicates itself to supporting the cause of the significant Hungarian minorities residing in adjoining countries.[72] The party is very vocal in defending schools, churches and cultural values of the Hungarians outside Hungary.

The meaning of the party's 2009 election slogan "Hungary belongs to the Hungarians" (Magyarország a Magyaroké!) was also the subject of considerable scrutiny. Some critics thought the slogan essentially tautological,[73] while others were sufficiently concerned to mount a successful complaint at the National Electoral Commission, which ruled it "unconstitutional" on the very eve of the election.[74]

On 11 March 2014, in response to a demonstration in Târgu Mureș, the Romanian president Traian Băsescu publicly asked the Romanian Government and the Romanian Parliament to issue a document to ban Jobbik members from Romania.[75]

Besides defending the rights of ethnic Hungarians living outside Hungary, Jobbik actively supports the cultural autonomy and language rights of the autochtonous ethnic minorities living in Hungary.[76][77]

The party has a pragmatic stance on the cooperation of the Central European[78] nations and countries and, despite the differences on the views about history, strenuously supports the cooperation of the countries of the region in the institutions of the EU, aiming to reach common goals. Therefore politicians of Jobbik called for action in the framework of the Wage Union European Citizens' Initiative.[79]

History and development

Hungarian Revolution of 1956 veteran Gergely Pongrátz, a Jobbik founder

Foundation

It was established in 2002 as the Right-Wing Youth Association (Jobboldali Ifjúsági Közösség – JOBBIK) by a group of Catholic and Protestant university students, and became a political party in October 2003.[80][third-party source needed]. The new party elected Dávid Kovács as president of the party, who served as chairman of the party until 2006. Instrumental in this was the person of Gergely Pongrátz, who in a speech to the founding conference made reference to the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.[81][third-party source needed]

Around Christmas 2003, Jobbik conducted a nationwide programme of erecting crosses, to remind Hungarians of the "true meaning" of the holiday. The move was criticized by several Christian intellectual groups.[82]

Alliances

Even though the far-right Hungarian Justice and Life Party (MIÉP) and Jobbik had publicly shown mutual aversion beforehand, the parties entered an electoral alliance for the 2006 national elections, called the MIÉP–Jobbik Third Way Alliance of Parties. Its intention was seen as winning votes from the major conservative Fidesz party.[83]

In the 2006 national elections the alliance won only 2.2% of the votes. Therefore, Jobbik termed the alliance a failure and virtually broke it up. In 2009 the State Audit Office (ÁSZ) reported the alliance for grave breaches of accounting rules. Jobbik blamed MIÉP alone for the irregularities.[84]

In the 2010 and 2014 general elections Jobbik had no political ally. Recently, some left-wing intellectuals suggested a coalition between the left-liberal parties and Jobbik[85] in order to change the Fidesz government, however Jobbik rejected the idea to cooperate with parties they call "20th century powers".[86] At the same time Gábor Vona told in an interview that “We will need several bridges ... to voters on the left, not to parties on the left. Jobbik offers a message, a program both to former leftist and former rightist voters.”[87]

Magyar Gárda and conflicts in the party

A Magyar Gárda choir sings in Békéscsaba.

During the 2000s public order was one of the key topics of the Hungarian political life, especially after in 2006 Roma people lynched a Hungarian teacher in the Eastern Hungarian village of Olaszliszka.[88] The case turned public attention to the failure of Roma integration and the inability of the Hungarian police to maintain law and order in the Hungarian countryide. The idea of setting up a "national guard", similar to the National Guard of the United States, became widespread among the conservative political parties of Hungary.

In June 2007, Gábor Vona, supported by the party, founded and registered the organisation called Magyar Gárda "Hungarian Guard", which says in its deed of foundation that it intends to become "part or core" of a national guard to be set up in accordance with the Gabriel Bethlen programme, and it also wishes to participate actively "in strengthening national self-defence" and "maintaining public order" as well as supporting and organising social and charity missions, in disaster prevention and civil defence. The foundation of the Guard was accompanied by sharp political debate.

On 10 March 2008 three leading figures resigned from the party: Dávid Kovács, the founding president of the party, Ervin Nagy, committee chairman, and Márton Fári, former chairman of the party's ethical committee. They indicated the Hungarian Guard as the cause of their resignation, stating that "Jobbik has been merged inseparably with the Guard, taking responsibility for something that it cannot really control in the long run".

On 2 July 2009 the Metropolitan Court of Appeal (Fővárosi Ítélőtábla) disbanded the Hungarian Guard Movement because the court held that the activities of the organization were against the human rights of minorities as guaranteed by the Constitution of Hungary. The Guard has attempted to reorganize itself as a civil service association, known as the Magyar Gárda Foundation, engaged in cultural and nation building activities rather than politics. Its renewed activities are opposed by the Hungarian authorities[89] and prosecutors claim that the founding of the new organization is in contempt of previous court rulings.

After several splits inside the organization, most of the former members of Magyar Gárda has become inactive. On January 28, 2017 some radical members of Magyar Gárda organized a demonstration against Gábor Vona and the Jobbik in front of the building where Jobbik held its year-opening event. Participants of the demonstration called the new politics of Jobbik a betrayal of the right-wing.[90]

Moderating the party

File:Jobbik Kongress.jpg
Gábor Vona speaks on the party congress of Jobbik in 2017

Before the 2014 parliamentary elections a new political trend, the so-called néppártosodás (English: moderation to a people's party) appeared in Jobbik. The party adopted a new style of communication while reversing many radical elements of its earlier program.[91] [92]Jobbik, according to its leaders, from a radical right-wing party turned to a conservative people's party with more moderate politics. President of Jobbik Gábor Vona, in an interview, personally promised to "cut the wildlings" of the one-time radicalism.[93]

Rising popularity among young people

Due to the disillusioning of young people because no-perspectives, decreasing living conditions and frustrating level of state corruption, popularity of Jobbik skyrocketed among younger generations. Since 2014 Jobbik consciously tried to address young people that are disappointed with other parties. As a result of its youth policy Jobbik's popularity has risen to a never seen level. According to an international survey, conducted in 2016, 53 percent of the young Hungarians aged between 18 and 35 years would vote for Jobbik.[94]

Controversy

The party has strenuously denied[95][96][97] allegations of anti-semitism or racism, as being either politically motivated[98][99][100] or simply false. It has also dismissed the criticism of perceived anti-semitism, racism and homophobia as the "favourite topics" of the political opponents. Even so, the movement has been accused of playing on those fears.[101]

Comments by members

On the eve of the 2009 elections to the European parliament, a comment was posted on an unofficial and unverified Hungarian political internet forum, allegedly in the name of Krisztina Morvai, who then headed the party's electoral list. Addressing their remarks to Hungarian Jews the comment poster stated that they "would be glad if the so-called proud Hungarian Jews went back to playing with their tiny circumcised dicks instead of vilifying me."[102][103][104] News of this comment, which has been roundly condemned,[105] spread rapidly around the world[106][107] and eventually even featured in an article by The Economist.[108] Morvai's critics have pointed to her refusal to even discuss the issue,[109] let alone deny it;[110] implying that this is sufficient to ascribe authorship of the remarks to her.[111]

Her supporters however, claim that though she certainly has a record of being critical of the state of Israel[112] given a sympathy for the Palestinian cause she developed while working as an international human rights lawyer,[113] the idea of Morvai being an anti-Semite is "simply ridiculous," given that at the time of her alleged remarks she was married to a Hungarian of Jewish origin,[114] with whom she has three children,[115] but from whom she is now separated.[114] In addition, Morvai is an independent public intellectual and has never become an official member of Jobbik. She was put on the electoral list of Jobbik for the European Parliament as an internationally recognized lawyer and human rights activist. Therefore, in some aspects, she has always enjoyed freedom from the party's official line.

In a newsletter published by a group calling itself "The trade union of Hungarian police officers prepared for action", the following was allegedly printed: "Given our current situation, anti-Semitism is not just our right, but it is the duty of every Hungarian homeland lover, and we must prepare for armed battle against the Jews." The editor of the union, Judit Szima, was a Jobbik candidate in the upcoming election for the European Union parliament. Haaretz alleged Szima "didn't see anything wrong with the content of the article."[116] Cooperation between Jobbik and the trade union led by Szima was dismantled in 2010 and since then there is no affiliation between them.[117]

During spring 2012, Jobbik representative in Hungarian parliament Zsolt Baráth caused an outrage by commemorating 1882 blood libel against the Jews in Parliament. The Tiszaeszlár blood libel, found later to be unrelated to Jews, was known as first major anti-Jewish event in modern Hungary, predating the Holocaust.[118] The speech of Baráth caused controversy among Jobbik MPs: some - however finding it inappropriate and uncalled for - stated that in a matured democracy there should not be taboo topics, while leaders of the Jobbik Parliamentary Group told the media that they had evaluated the speech and learnt the lesson that they should care more about what their MPs are talking. After the incident Baráth was not re-elected and is not an MP of Jobbik anymore.[119]

In November 2012, while evaluating the latest news on the controversial Israeli military action in the Gaza strip, the party's deputy parliamentary leader, Márton Gyöngyösi, statedin his speech in the Parliament: "I think such a conflict makes it timely to tally up people of Jewish ancestry who live here, especially in the Hungarian Parliament and the Hungarian government, who, indeed, pose a national security risk to Hungary."[120] Márton Gyöngyösi admitted immediately after his speech that he had composed his sentence wrongly, as he thought of MPs with Israeli-Hungarian double citizenship and not of Jewish people. At the same time Gyöngyösi offered apology for the misunderstanding.[121] Despite this, political rivals of Jobbik started a harsh smear campaign, depicting Gyöngyösi as an extremist. As Al Jazeera reported, this led to "international condemnation of Nazi-style policies and a protest outside the legislature in Budapest.[122] Around ten thousand Hungarians[123] in Budapest protested against Gyöngyösi's anti-Semitic remarks. All major Hungarian political parties took part in the protest. At the protest, Attila Mesterházy the leader of the successor of the state party of the communist era, the Hungarian Socialist Party, described Jobbik as a "fascist possessions virus", while 5th district of Budapest mayor Antal Rogán, representing the governing Fidesz party, described Jobbik as "evil".[124] Jewish organizations, ignoring Gyöngyösi's apology and correction, responded to Gyöngyösi speech by describing it as a reintroduction of Nazism in Hungarian parliament and by describing Jobbik as a Nazi party.[125]

In 2014 Tibor Ágoston, the deputy chairman of Jobbik's Debrecen and Hajdú-Bihar County organization, referred to the Holocaust as the "holoscam". Tamás Horovitz, the chairman of the Debrecen Jewish Congregation and the mayor of Debrecen, Lajos Kósa, condemned Ágoston’s remarks.[126][127][128] Later Ágoston harshly criticized Gábor Vona for not supporting Előd Novák and cutting ties with the so-called "radicals" in the party.[129]

In 2015 deputy leader Előd Novák posted to his social media account on Facebook a picture of himself and his family next to a separate image of Rikardo Racz, the first newborn in Hungary of the year who was born to a Romani family. In a comment on the pictures, he stated that the population of Hungarians would become a minority and suggested that the Romani population is the biggest problem facing Hungary. Novák's remarks were both condemned and supported. Novák would later respond to the issue by refusing to apologize and suggested that the family should apologize to him.[130] Előd Novák was forced by the party's parliamentary group to resign from his position as an MP in 2016.[131] Now, he is a vocal critic of Jobbik's new policies.

World Jewish Congress Protest

Members of the New Hungarian Guard stand at a Jobbik rally against a gathering of the World Jewish Congress in Budapest, 4 May 2013

On 4 May 2013, Jobbik members protested against the World Jewish Congress in Budapest, claiming the protest was against "a Jewish attempt to buy up Hungary".[132] Jobbik MP Enikő Hegedűs vociferously condemned both Israel and Jews at the rally as her husband, Lóránt Hegedűs Jr., stood nearby.[133] An ordained minister in the Reformed Church in Hungary, Lóránt Hegedűs himself had served in the National Assembly as an MP of the far-right nationalist Hungarian Justice and Life Party from 1998 to 2002.[134] He invited Holocaust denier David Irving to his Budapest church in 2007 as a "special guest",[134] and has also been accused of anti-Semitism on several occasions for statements he has made about Jews at Jobbik events. At a 2011 rally, he claimed that Jews orchestrated World War II and controlled the international media,[135] and a year prior had alleged that the Hungarian government was secretly cooperating with Mossad to facilitate an Israeli takeover of Hungary with the assistance of Hungarian Jews and mainstream churches.[136] After his wife's statement regarding the World Jewish Congress, the Reformed Church launched an inquiry into the minister's conduct, with presiding bishop Gusztáv Bölcskei denouncing Hegedűs's activism for Jobbik as "permanent provocation" which was incompatible with scripture.[133]

President of Jobbik Gábor Vona later clarified that he had criticized Zionism as a political idea and pointed out that he understood the Hungarian Jewish community had to survive such traumas during the 20th century that make dialogue very hard. At the same time he emphasized that he wanted to have harmonic relations with the Hungarian Jewish community.[137]

The"Hannukah case"

In December 2016 Gábor Vona, besides his Christmas greetings to the Christian churches, as a gesture sent his greetings to his Jewish compatriots on the occasion of the Jewish holidays. The message of Vona raised controversy among Hungarian Jewish communities.[138][139] Vona had already pointed out before that those, even party members, who had wanted to see Jobbik as a racist or anti-Semitic party had been wrong.However, Vona took responsibility for turning blind eyes in such situations earlier.[140]

Warnings against "EU Slavery" and ethnic shift in Hungary

Gábor Vona earlier said that, Hungarians became slaves because the European Union had only wanted Hungary to enter the EU because of its cheap workforce.[141] Vona also stated that "the number of Hungarians continues to fall while the gypsy population grows ever larger. This was not racism but a real social and economic problem. Anyone who doesn’t understand this is not normal."[141]

In a 2016 inverview, Vona announced that he believes the EU also has some advantages.[142]

In his 2017 interview Márton Gyöngyösi, deputy leader of the party's parliamentary group, pointed out that Jobbik seeks for the constructive reform of the European Union.[143] In addition, Gyöngyösi also said that in order to have a more harmonized EU, maybe some national competencies, such as labor conditions and wage regulations can be reconsidered.

Attempts to criminalize promotion of "sexual deviancy"

Jobbik, as a conservative party, does not prefer policies which promote lifestyles different than the Christian-conservative model. The party maintains that the most important social unit is the traditional family. In April 2012, Jobbik tried to introduce a bill into the Hungarian parliament that would change the national constitution to allegedly "protect public morals and the mental health of the young generations" by banning the popularization of "sexual deviancy". The legislation was drafted by party spokesman Ádám Mirkóczki. This was to target "homosexuality, sex changes, transvestitism, bisexuality and paedophile behaviour". The proposed amendments would criminalise anyone who "popularizes their sexual relations—deviancy—with another person of the same sex, or other disturbances of sexual behaviour, before the wider public". The penalty would be three years in prison, or five years if 'popularizing' is done in front of minors. The draft legislation ultimately failed to pass.[144] At the same time, Jobbik has never supported any repressive measures on individuals.[145] According to the policies of the party, different sexual orientations are personal matters.

Other issues

Support for Miklós Horthy

In Hungary it is a very important and complex issue to deal with the interwar period and the legacy of the one-time governor of Hungary, Miklós Horthy. Jobbik, like other right and centre-right parties is Hungary, supports a balanced view, appreciating the positive elements of the consolidation after the World War I and Trianon trauma. On 3 November 2013, Márton Gyöngyösi and other Jobbik members unveiled a bronze bust of Miklós Horthy, a nationalist admiral who served as Regent of Hungary from 1920 to 1944, in front of the "Church of Homecoming" in downtown Budapest's Liberty Square, where Lóránt Hegedűs serves as pastor.[146] The ceremony drew strong public and official condemnations over the legacy of Horthy, who led Hungary into World War II in 1941 on the side of the Axis powers (which the country had officially joined the previous year). Many Hungarians thus see Horthy as a source of deep national shame and Nazi collaborator, complicit in the murder of half a million Hungarian Jews in the Holocaust in Hungary. Others, however, revere him as a national hero, ostensibly for guiding the country to stability in its chaotic interwar period—at the ceremony, Gyöngyösi proclaimed Horthy "the greatest Hungarian statesman of the 20th century".[147]

Several thousand individuals—some of whom had pinned yellow Stars of David on their clothing came out to protest against the statue, and were met by a smaller crowd of far right protesters near the church who responded with anti-Semitic and racist slurs. Mayor Antal Rogán condemned Jobbik's move as a "political provocation" that would allow the "western European left-wing press" to unfairly characterise Hungary as being plagued by anti-Semitic extremists. Hegedűs, who had already hung a portrait of Horthy by his church's entrance well prior to the statue's installation,[134] defended Horthy's legacy to journalists after the unveiling, calling it "unjust and historically wrong" to implicate the former leader in crimes against humanity because he was suspected not prosecuted at the Nuremberg trials.[147] In light of the furore over the statue, church officials announced they would launch another official probe into Hegedűs's political activities.[146]

Electoral performance

Growth and electoral success

The party faced its first electoral test with the coming of the 2009 European parliamentary elections. The election's results shocked their opponents:[148] with the party sending three MEPs to Strasbourg; coming close to equal in number of votes with the governing Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP) while eliminating their liberal coalition partner Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ), to become the nation's third largest party.[149]

In London on 16 May 2008, the delegation of Jobbik's Committee of Foreign Affairs met Nick Griffin, chairman of the British National Party. They discussed cooperation between the two parties, and the elections for the European Parliament. Griffin spoke at the party rally in August 2008, while former vice-president Zoltán Füzessy is presently resident in Gravesend, Kent, England.[150]

The Alliance of European National Movements (AENM) was formed in Budapest on 24 October 2009. The alliance's founding members were Jobbik (the Alliance was established during their sixth party congress), France's National Front, UK's British National Party Italy's Tricolour Flame, Sweden's National Democrats and Belgium's National Front.[151] Since January 2014 Béla Kovács has been its president.[152][153] Since then Jobbik officialy quit AENM and cut all ties with the members of the alliance.

On 12 April 2015, Jobbik's Lajos Rig defeated the Fidesz candidate in a parliamentary by-election in Veszprém County. It was the second by-election lost by Fidesz after the national 2014 elections, leaving the ruling Fidesz-KDNP coalition two short of the parliamentary supermajority (kétharmad).[154]

File:Gabor vona sympathizer.jpg
Gábor Vona on his nationwide tour with Jobbik voters (2017)

On 14 March 2017 Jobbik started close cooperation with Bulgarian VMRO, Estonian Conservative People's Party and Croatian GO! as well as with trade unions, such as the Polish Solidarność 80, in the framework of the Wage Union European Citizens' Initiative.[155][156][157]

Hungarian Parliamentary Elections 2014

In November 2013, the party leader Gábor Vona, expressed optimism about the election saying that the party planned "no less than election victory in 2014". He argued that Jobbik candidates had been faring well in local elections and that opinion surveys had showed that Jobbik was the most popular party among voters aged under 35.[158] The party has prepared its election programme dubbed "We'll say it, we'll solve it," which focuses on guaranteeing people a livelihood, safety and order. Vona said his party would initiate a referendum on protecting Hungarian land and on amending Hungary's European Union accession treaty.[159]

On 26 January 2014, Vona held a rally in London where he sharply criticised the election law for preventing Hungarians living abroad from voting by mail at the parliamentary election.[160]

Electoral results

Election Votes Seats Rank Government Leader of the
national list
# % ±pp # +/−
20061 119,007 2.20%
0 / 386
±0 5th extra-parliamentary
2010 855,436 16.67% Increase14.47
47 / 386
Increase 47 3rd in opposition Gábor Vona
2014 1,020,476 20.22% Increase3.55
23 / 199
Decrease 24 3rd in opposition Gábor Vona

1In an electoral alliance with MIÉP, under the name of the "MIÉP–Jobbik Third Way Alliance of Parties", joined by Independent Smallholders’ Party (FKgP) organisations from 15 counties.

Election year # of overall votes % of overall vote # of overall seats won +/- Notes
2009 427,773 14.77% (3rd)
3 / 22
2014 340,287 14.67% (2nd)
3 / 21
Steady 0
2009 Seat winners:
  1. Krisztina Morvai
  2. Zoltán Balczó – His seat EP was taken over by Béla Kovács, when he became a member of the Hungarian Parliament in May 2010.
  3. Csanád Szegedi – He left the party in July 2012.
2014 Seat winners:
  1. Krisztina Morvai
  2. Zoltán Balczó
  3. Béla Kovács

Mayoral:

History of leaders

Image Name Entered office Left office Length of Leadership
1 Dávid Kovács 24 October 2003 25 November 2006 3 years, 1 month and 1 day
2 Gábor Vona 25 November 2006 Incumbent 17 years, 9 months and 23 days

Literature

  • Kovács, András (2013). The Post-Communist Extreme Right: The Jobbik Party in Hungary. London/New York: Bloomsbury. pp. 223–234. ISBN 978-1-78093-343-6. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Vida, István (2011). "Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom (Jobbik)". Magyarországi politikai pártok lexikona (1846–2010) [Encyclopedia of the Political Parties in Hungary (1846–2010)] (in Hungarian). Gondolat Kiadó. pp. 362–365. ISBN 978-963-693-276-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)

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  140. ^ http://www.atv.hu/belfold/20150910-vona-nem-akarok-mindenaron-miniszterelnok-lenni - For me, Jobbik has never been a far-right, fascistic, national socialist, racist or anti-Semitic party. If such people had joined us, it might have happened because of exaltation or mistake. In this, my responsibility, or the responsibility of the leaders of the party is that we just turned blind eye to these phenomena and thought that the time will solve the problem.
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