Viktor Zoltán Kazai - Central European University, Budapest

2019

Osservatorio sulle fonti / Observatory on Sources of Law

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Section: Sources of Law in the EU member States

HUNGARY

By Viktor Zoltán Kazai, Central European University, Budapest

Name of the Act/s

Bill no. T/8044 on the amendment of certain acts regulating the legal status of Members of Parliament and the functioning of the National Assembly / T. 8044 számú törvényjavaslat az Országgyűlés működését és a képviselők jogállását érintő egyes törvények módosításáról

Date of entry into force of original text

Adopted, not yet promulgated

Date of Text (Adopted)

10 December 2019

Type of text 

(name in English / name in the official language)

Parliamentary act / Törvény

Enacted by

Hungarian National Assembly

Subject area

parliamentary law, disciplinary measures

Comment 

On 10 December 2019 the National Assembly adopted Bill no. T/8044 on the amendment of certain acts regulating the legal status of Members of Parliament and the functioning of the National Assembly. As Máté Kocsis, MP of the governing Fidesz-KDNP coalition said, this act is a response to the parliamentary opposition’s attempts to obstruct the work of the National Assembly.

The amendment introduces two new forms of infringement: i) speech manifestly disturbing another MP’s speech or the presiding of the session and ii) disruption of the continuation of the session and the hindering of other MPs, parliamentary or public officials from exercising their rights and carrying out their duties. Ultimately, the MP who commits one of these infringements is obliged to leave the chamber if she disregards the warnings and calls to order of the Speaker.

The rules on exclusion become more severe as well. According to the new rules, if the MP excluded from the session does not leave the chamber right after the oral warning, she can be banned from entering the premises of the parliament. The exclusion is a sanction very limited in time and does not deprive the MP of her right to vote in person. A ban from entering the premises of parliament however can last for a maximum of 60 working days (depending on the seriousness of the violation) and the MP can exercise her right to vote only by proxy. MPs lose their official mandate as Speaker, vice-president of the National Assembly and parliamentary notary if they are excluded from the session twice or banned from entering the parliamentary premises even once.

MPs’ right to exercise control over public institutions becomes more restricted. In the future, parliamentarians may only request information from public institutions after preliminary consultation (i.e. they will not have to right to show up at public institutions without notifying them in advance about their inquiry). MPs will also have to respect stricter rules on confidentiality of information.

Secondary sources/ doctrinal works (if any)

It is admitted by the MPs of the governing majority that this act is a reaction to the behavior of the opposition parties who have adopted unconventional forms of expression and behavior to protest against controversial legislative reforms. See, for example, the case of the opposition’s attempt to obstruct the enactment of the administrative judicial reform:

Kazai, Viktor Z.: Administrative Judicial Reform in Hungary: Who Gives a Fig about Parliamentary Process?, VerfBlog, 2019/5/01, https://verfassungsblog.de/administrative-judicial-reform-in-hungary-who-gives-a-fig-about-parliamentary-process/

About the previous amendments to the parliamentary disciplinary regime:

Kazai, Viktor Z.: The Emerging Trend of Parliamentary Performance: Freedom of Expression in the Hungarian National Assembly, VerfBlog,2018/2/12, https://verfassungsblog.de/the-emerging-trend-of-parliamentary-performance-freedom-of-expression-in-the-hungarian-national-assembly/

See also the judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in the cases Karácsony and Others v. Hungary, and Szél and Others v. Hungary: http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-162831 According to the unanimous judgment of the Court, the restriction of the applicant opposition MPs’ freedom of expression by the Speaker of the National Assembly was not accompanied by effective and adequate safeguards from abuse. Consequently, the ECtHR found a violation of Article 10.

Available Text

https://www.parlament.hu/irom41/08044/08044.pdf

2019

Osservatorio sulle fonti / Observatory on Sources of Law

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Section: Sources of Law in the EU member States

HUNGARY

By Viktor Zoltán Kazai, Central European University, Budapest

Name of the Act/s

Judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in the case of Ilias and Ahmed v. Hungary [GC], Appl. no. 47287/15

Date of Text (Adopted)

21 November 2019

Type of text 

(name in English / name in the official language)

Judgment of the European Court of Human Rights

Enacted by

European Court of Human Rights

Subject area

Prohibition of torture, Rights of refugees and asylum-seekers

Comment 

The applicants, Mr. Ilias and Mr. Ahmed, are two Bangladeshi nationals who arrived in Hungary from Serbia in 2015 and entered the so-called ‘transit zone’, situated on Hungarian territory at the border between the two countries. The applicants’ asylum requests were rejected by the Hungarian immigration office based on a government decree which qualified Serbia as a “safe third country”. Consequently, the applicants were escorted out of the transit zone and then entered Serbia.

In 2017, in a chamber judgment, the European Court of Human Rights found violations of Articles 3, 5 and 13 of the Convention, arguing that the applicants’ detention in the transit zone constituted de facto deprivation of liberty with no adequate safeguards, there was no effective remedy with respect to the conditions of their detention and they were sent back to Serbia based on a legislative presumption that it was a “safe third country”.

The Grand Chamber has partly reversed the previous judgment. It concluded that the applicants’ detention in the transit zone did not constitute a deprivation of liberty with no adequate safeguards because they were allowed to leave voluntarily in the direction of Serbia. The fact that Serbia was not considered to be a “safe third country” by the United Nations was deemed irrelevant by the justices. However, the Court concluded that the Hungarian authorities failed to assess the risk of denial of access to asylum proceedings in a presumed safe third country. Consequently, the Grand Chamber found a violation of Article 3 only with respect to the applicants’ expulsion.

Secondary sources/ doctrinal works (if any)

For the latest news and analyses of the refugee system in Hungary, see materials of the Hungarian Helsinki Committee: https://www.helsinki.hu/en/refugees_and_migrants/monitoring/

It is worth noting that in October 2019, Advocate General Shaprston delivered her opinion in the joint cases C-715/17 Commission v Poland, C-718/17 Commission v Hungary and C-719/17 Commission v Czech Republic concerning the three Member States’ refusal to comply with the Council of the European Union’s decisions on the provisional and time-limited mechanism for the mandatory relocation of applicants for international protection (Relocation Decisions). AG Sharpston argues that the Court of Justice of the EU should rule that the three Member States have failed to fulfil their obligations under EU law. The press release is available at: https://curia.europa.eu/jcms/upload/docs/application/pdf/2019-10/cp190133en.pdf

For an analysis of the Chamber judgment, see Kilibarda, Pavle: The ECtHR’s Ilias and Ahmed v. Hungary and Why It Matters, EJIL:Talk!,March 20, 2017, https://www.ejiltalk.org/the-ecthrs-ilias-and-ahmed-v-hungary-and-why-it-matters/

Available Text

http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-198760

2019

Osservatorio sulle fonti / Observatory on Sources of Law

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Section: Sources of Law in the EU member States

HUNGARY

By Viktor Zoltán Kazai, Central European University, Budapest

Name of the Act/s

Judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in the case of Szurovecz v. Hungary, Appl. no. 15428/16

Date of Text (Adopted)

8 October 2019

Type of text 

(name in English / name in the official language)

Judgment of the European Court of Human Rights

Enacted by

European Court of Human Rights

Subject area

Freedom of expression, Freedom of the press

Comment 

The applicant is a journalist at a Hungarian online news portal who wanted to cover the activities of a human rights NGO in a reception centre for asylum-seekers and refugees during the “the refugee crisis” in May 2015. The applicant requested permission from the Office of Immigration and Nationality (OIN) to enter different reception centers, but the requests were rejected based on the protection of the security and the right to privacy of asylum-seekers.

The journalist challenged the refusal in a judicial review procedure, but the Budapest administrative and labor court concluded that the OIN’s decision was not an administrative act, therefore no judicial remedy was available in the case.

Given the great significance of the issue, several third-party interveners submitted amici curiae to the ECtHR, such as Media Legal Defence Initiative, Index on Censorship, Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, European Publishers Council, PEN International, Hungarian Helsinki Committee, the Dutch Association of Journalists, and the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom.

The ECtHR observed that the domestic authorities had not given sufficient consideration to whether the refusal of permission to access and conduct journalistic research inside the reception centre, for reasons concerning the private life and security of asylum-seekers, had been effectively necessary in practice. The justices concluded that the absence of any real balancing of the interests in the issue by the domestic authorities constituted an absolute refusal which failed to satisfy the requirements of proportionality under Article 10 of the Convention. Consequently, the Court found a violation of the applicant’s freedom of expression.

Secondary sources/ doctrinal works (if any)

For an excellent summary of the situation of the freedom of the press see Erdelyi, Peter: What happened in the Hungarian media could happen in your country too, Euronews, Nov 21, 2019, https://www.euronews.com/2019/11/21/a-free-press-no-more-the-media-in-hungary-has-become-nothing-more-orban-s-mouthpiece-view

Voorhoof, Dirk – Ronan Ó Fathaigh: Denying journalist access to asylum-seeker ‘reception centre’ in Hungary violated Article 10 ECHR, Strasbourg Observers, Nov 4, 2019, https://strasbourgobservers.com/2019/11/04/denying-journalist-access-to-asylum-seeker-reception-centre-in-hungary-violated-article-10-echr/

Available Text

http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-196418

2019

Osservatorio sulle fonti / Observatory on Sources of Law

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Section: Sources of Law in the EU member States

HUNGARY

By Viktor Zoltán Kazai, Central European University, Budapest

Name of the Act/s

Act no. LXV of 2019 on the amendment of certain acts related to parliamentary immunity / 2019. évi LXV. törvény a képviselők mentelmi jogával összefüggésben egyes törvények módosításáról

Date of entry into force of original text

16 July 2019

Date of Text (Adopted)

2 July 2019

Type of text

Parliamentary act / törvény

Enacted by

Hungarian National Assembly

Reference to the Constitution (art)

Article 6 (1) (parliamentary immunity)

Article 4 (2) and (5) (qualified majority requirement)

The English version of the Fundamental Law is available at: https://hunconcourt.hu/uploads/sites/3/2018/11/thefundamentallawofhungary_20181015_fin.pdf

Subject area

Parliamentary immunity

Comment

The present parliamentary act amends certain rules on parliamentary immunity regulated by Act no. XXXVI on the National Assembly. According to the previous version of the law, candidates for parliamentary elections registered by the National Elections Committee benefitted from the same parliamentary immunity regime as elected MPs. It also meant that criminal procedure could only be initiated or continued against candidates suspected of breaking the law with the permission of the National Elections Committee (inviolability).

The new rules provide that candidates for parliamentary elections registered by the National Elections Committee are no longer entitled to inviolability if they have been subject to coercive measures restricting personal liberty ordered by a judge or the indictment has been filed by the prosecutor before the decision of the National Elections Committee on their registration. Therefore, in these cases the immunity does not need to be lifted.

The new regulation also applies to candidates for the European parliamentary elections.

The present act, also called “lex Czeglédy”, springs from a scandal concerning Csaba Czeglédy, a politician suspected of having committed corruption related criminal offenses. Criminal procedure initiated against Mr. Czeglédy had to be terminated after he had been registered as candidate for EP elections of the political party Democratic Coalition (Demokratikus Koalíció) in 2019. Since the required two-thirds majority of the members of the National Elections Committee has not been achieved, his immunity has not been lifted.

Shortly after that decision, the Ministry of Justice sent a letter to the President of the National Elections Committee expressing its disapproval of the refusal to lift Mr. Czeglédy’s immunity. On 23 May, prominent members of the Fidesz-KNDP governing coalition introduced the bill aiming at the amendment of the relevant rules on immunity. According to the Democratic Coalition, Mr. Czeglédy is victim of a show trial.

Available Text

http://njt.hu/cgi_bin/njt_doc.cgi?docid=214951.370152

2019

Osservatorio sulle fonti / Observatory on Sources of Law

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Section: Sources of Law in the EU member States

HUNGARY

By Viktor Zoltán Kazai, Central European University, Budapest

Name of the Act/s

Act no. LXI of 2019 on the postponement of the entry into force of the Act on administrative courts / 2019. évi LXI. törvény a közigazgatási bíróságokról szóló törvény hatálybalépésének elhalasztásáról

Date of entry into force of original text

10 July 2019

Date of Text (Adopted)

2 July 2019

Type of text

Parliamentary act / törvény

Enacted by

Hungarian National Assembly

Reference to the Constitution (art)

Article 25. cikk (8) (qualified majority requirement)

The English version of the Fundamental Law is available at: https://hunconcourt.hu/uploads/sites/3/2018/11/thefundamentallawofhungary_20181015_fin.pdf

Subject area

organization of the judiciary, administrative court system, judicial independence

Comment

The extraordinarily short law (only 4 articles), introduced by the Hungarian government, simply repeals Act no. CXXXI of 2018 on the entry into force of the act on administrative courts and certain transitional rules (hereinafter: administrative court reform law). In practical terms, it means that the entry into force of the administrative court reform law is postponed for an indefinite period of time.

The administrative court reform plans of the Hungarian government have met strong criticism articulated by representatives of academia, human rights NGOs and European monitoring bodies. For further information, see the previous contribution related to Act no XXIV of 2019 on additional guarantees of the independence of administrative courts.

According to the official explanatory memorandum of the bill, its aim is to put an end to the “disputes about the unfounded criticisms concerning the Rule of Law in Hungary” in order to guarantee the progress of the administrative judicial system reform.

Gergely Gulyás, Minister heading the Prime Minister’s Office said at a hearing held in the European Parliament’s Justice Committee on 18 June that the establishment of independent administrative courts, characterized by him as a “major step in the direction of a liberal rule of law”, was sidelined due to criticism from abroad. He added that the appellate system would not be compromised as a result, however, and while the postponement “has resulted in some uncertainty,” the planned date for the introduction of a two-tier administrative court appeal system continues to remain 1 January 2020.

Human rights NGOs operating in Hungary, such as the Hungarian Helsinki Committee and Amnesty International, remain worried about the independence of the judiciary.

Available Text

In Hungarian:

http://njt.hu/cgi_bin/njt_doc.cgi?docid=214947.370138

In English:

http://njt.hu/translated/doc/J2019T0061P_20190709_FIN.pdf

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