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Hungarian minister dons Texas Stetson to charm US conservatives

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Hungary’s outgoing Justice Minister has taken her charm offensive Stateside in the name of building conservative alliances.

“Hello, Texas! We came to build new alliances!”, Hungarian Minister of Justice Judit Varga Tweeted on 17 July after arriving in the Lone Star State.

Following a meeting with the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a leading conservative thinktank, Varga said that “to fight the liberal mainstream, we need friends both in [and] outside Europe” to enable a “stronger voice” for the “conservative approach”.

In an “exclusive” interview with the Dallas Express she said that her trip was driven by a desire “to enhance synergies between conservative politics all over the continents”.

“We believe in family, we believe in national sovereignty, we don’t think that mass illegal immigration is a good thing for our future,” Varga told the newspaper, highlighting the similarities she saw between Hungary and Texas politics.

This included drawing parallels between Hungary clashing with European Union institutions and Texas butting heads with Washington over issues such as immigration, “territorial sovereignty” and securing borders.

During the visit she also made comparisons at the national levels, saying that “regardless of the distance, Hungary [and] USA face the same challenges”, including migration, gender identity theories and “the constant attack on Christian values”.

In 2020 Varga was voted one of the 20 most influential women in politics by the Dutch political weekly Elsevier Weekblad.

The photogenic minister has been labelled the “charm canon” for Viktor Orban’s government and a “fiery defender” of its policies that so often draw the ire of the Brussels establishment.

Hungary’s government has increasingly sought to position itself in the EU as a bastion of conservative values standing up to the progressive polices of the EU’s more liberal leaders.

Varga recently announced that she would be resigning from her cabinet post at the end of July in order to focus on the European Elections in 2024.

“The stakes are very high for the 2024 EP elections: a conservative turn in the European institutions is needed, and I want to take an active role in this,” Varga told Hungarian media Magyar Nemzet at the end of June following the announcement.

She is viewed as a strong contender to become the lead candidate for Fidesz, Hungary’s ruling party, in the 2024 EP elections.