Orban and Kaczynski Mikhail Svetlov & Artur Widak/Getty Images

The Illiberal International

When Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán declared in 2014 his intention to build an “illiberal democracy,” many assumed he was referring to his own country. Now, he and Jarosław Kaczyński, the leader of Poland’s ruling Law and Justice party, have proclaimed a counter-revolution aimed at turning the EU into an illiberal project.

WARSAW – Stalin, in the first decade of Soviet power, backed the idea of “socialism in one country,” meaning that, until conditions ripened, socialism was for the USSR alone. When Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán declared, in July 2014, his intention to build an “illiberal democracy,” it was widely assumed that he was creating “illiberalism in one country.” Now, Orbán and Jarosław Kaczyński, the leader of Poland’s ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, and puppet-master of the country’s government (though he holds no office), have proclaimed a counter-revolution aimed at turning the European Union into an illiberal project.

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