“We are very alarmed by these developments,” reads the letter, signed by Austria, Belgium, Cheche, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Slovenian and Sweden.
France and Germany have also signed, said an EU diplomat in Politico.
A series of Hungarian laws Who threaten the fines against the organizers and participants in LGBTQ +events, under the guise of child protection, “contrary to the fundamental values of human dignity, freedom, equality and respect for human rights as provided for in article 2 of the European Union Treaty,” said the press release.
The text does not specify what measures that Brussels should take. The obvious option, however, would be to impose “provisional measures” against Hungary, which is equivalent to EU legal injunctions against a government to prevent damage, in this case by ordering Budapest to allow the celebration of pride.
Brussels, which is retain 18 billion euros in EU funds From Hungary to violations of the law rule, so far fell to additional coercive action. Equality Commissioner Hadja Lahbib rejected on the idea To impose provisional measures at a meeting last week, according to a participant. A failure to implement the measures could then trigger penalties.
Lahbib told legislators that she lacked her boss’s support, the president of the Ursula von der Leyen commission for new measures.