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Orbán’s foreign payroll: How Hungary spent a fortune to buy influence on the Western right

Investigative reporting based on contracts and public records says Hungary, under Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, financed a network of Western far-right figures through state-backed grants and research fellowships—channeling support toward movements and media aligned with the European right.

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Marcus Kay

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Orbán’s foreign payroll: How Hungary spent a fortune to buy influence on the Western right

A new investigation says Hungary has spent significant public money to build influence on the Western right by funding an international network of researchers, media figures, and political-adjacent personalities aligned with Viktor Orbán and his government.

The reporting traces the funding to state-linked structures and grant programs designed to support “research fellowships” and networking activities abroad. It argues that the aim went beyond conventional academic funding: fellows were reportedly encouraged to appear in public-facing media, cultivate relationships across right-wing circles, and help promote an agreed narrative about Hungary as a model for a broader ideological shift in the West.

According to the investigation, the value of the contracts grew over time—rising from earlier totals in 2022 to much larger figures in 2023 and 2024—suggesting a sustained strategy rather than one-off sponsorship. The article also says that freedom-of-information requests for the agreements yielded incomplete materials, with the names of some researchers redacted in copies that were released, even though the individuals involved were said to be identifiable through other public listings.

The investigation also points to connections between the funded network and prominent conservative outlets and conference ecosystems. It highlights overlap between certain funded figures and editorial or contributor roles tied to Western right-leaning publications and gatherings, arguing these relationships helped turn publicly funded grants into political visibility and ideological distribution.

Finally, the piece says it sought responses from those named or connected to the contracts, but that replies did not substantively resolve questions about how the funding was used in practice.

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