Fruzsina Gárdos-Orosz

Constitutional Justice under Populism

The Transformation of Constitutional Jurisprudence in Hungary since 2010


Migration

The volume has already pointed out that the migration crisis has brought fundamental changes in the practice of constitutional courts, despite the fact that Hungary was not seriously affected by the refugee flow, apart from a very short and limited period. There was a moment in 2015 when the migration crisis reached Hungary, with more than 400 000 people arriving in the country,1 most of whom then went on to Austria and Germany. Hungary could not control its borders. Hungary was criticised by the European Union for creating chaos and for seeking to control the situation through austerity measures. The Government called for a referendum to give Hungary’s voters the opportunity to express their views on the legal measures that the EU’s pro-accession policy entails.2 The EU rule was that Member States should allocate refugees arriving in Italy and Greece on the basis of a pre-quota for the purposes of the asylum procedure, in order to relieve the burden on countries in difficulty and to share fairly the burden of the migration crisis. Hungary would have received a first round of 1 294 out of 160 000 asylum seekers. The Hungarian Government did not find the regulation on the transfer of people to the EU acceptable and appealed to the CJEU to declare that the EU had no competence to regulate such a measure, and that the regulation was ultra vires. In addition, Hungary built a fence along the Serbian and Croatian borders to prevent illegal border crossings.

Constitutional Justice under Populism

Tartalomjegyzék


Kiadó: Akadémiai Kiadó

Online megjelenés éve: 2024

ISBN: 978 963 454 971 0

In Hungary’s 2010 parliamentary elections, Fidesz – Hungarian Civic Alliance and its coalition partner, the Christian Democratic Party won a landslide victory and the newly formed populist Orbán-government gained a two-thirds constitution-making parliamentary majority, which it has kept for four consecutive terms (so far). In the spring of 2011, the National Assembly adopted Hungary’s new Fundamental Law, which has since been amended twelve times. The transformation of the Hungarian Constitutional Court and constitutional jurisprudence has played a significant role in cementing the new regime. The changes can be followed in a chronological order in this book. The author starts with the explanation of the concept of constitutional adjudication, she then reviews the procedural-institutional developments and the critical doctrinal junctures of the past thirteen years with regard to the general assessment of the change in constitutional justice. Finally, the volume offers a reading of how the scholarly experiences and factual results of the thirteen years spent under populism compare to the ideal of constitutional-court-made constitutional justice.

Fruzsina Gárdos-Orosz is research professor at the Institute for Legal Studies, HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences and professor of constitutional law at ELTE Law School, Budapest. She worked as law clerk at the Hungarian Constitutional Court in different positions between 2003 and 2013. She has published extensively on different aspects of constitutional law, including the practice of the Hungarian Constitutional Court, the impact of different contemporary challenges to constitutional adjudication, as well as the rule of law resilience of Hungarian legal system.

Hivatkozás: https://mersz.hu/gardos-orosz-constitutional-justice-under-populism//

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