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Hungary’s New Government Launches Its Anti-Orbán Purge I MCC Brussels Podcast

Published 2 weeks, 5 days ago
Description

In this episode: is Péter Magyar restoring Hungarian democracy, or using constitutional power to remove his main rival? Does the export controls and shutdown of Anthropic’s Mythos model show how desperately far behind the EU is on cutting-edge technology?  And has the EU Transparency Register become a neutral accountability tool, or a bureaucratic weapon against dissenting voices in Brussels?

Host Jacob Reynolds is joined by Richard Schenk and Javier Villamor, Brussels-based EU/NATO correspondent for The European Conservative.

First, the panel turns to Hungary, where the new Tisza government has pushed through a retroactive two-term limit on prime ministers. Supporters call it a democratic safeguard after years of Fidesz rule. Critics see it as Lex Orbán: a constitutional manoeuvre designed to keep Viktor Orbán from returning to power, while also putting pressure on institutions linked to the previous government.

The second topic is artificial intelligence. The row over Anthropic’s Mythos model raises a brutal question for Europe: what happens when the most powerful AI systems are controlled elsewhere? Jacob, Richard and Javier discuss whether the EU has spent the past three years regulating a technology it does not lead, and whether Europe’s real problem is not just investment, but energy, chips, talent, scale and regulatory culture.

Finally, the episode turns to MCC Brussels itself, after its suspension from the EU Transparency Register. The panel asks whether this is merely a technical dispute over registration rules, or part of a broader pattern in which Brussels uses procedure, paperwork and access rules to police the boundaries of acceptable debate.

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