8.1 Introduction
EU constitutional rules require member states to be constitutional democracies. Yet, a populist authoritarian has, following Carl Schmitt’s rulebook, captured the constitutional state in Hungary and turned it into an autocracy. It need not have happened, the 2015 ‘migration crisis’ notwithstanding. The new authoritarian regime and its brutal anti-immigration rules serve the sole purpose: to secure prime minister Viktor Orbán’s firm hold on power.
European Union politicians hold the assumption that every EU member state is a functioning democracy. Therefore, member states are permitted to ignore each other’s faults, knowing that democracies are self-correcting. While it is true that democracies are capable of self-correction, today, Hungary cannot correct its constitutional problems itself.Footnote 1 In the 2010 election, the Fidesz-KDNP party got 52.73% of the list votes, but – due to the individual districts where the winner takes all – in Parliament gained 67.88% of the seats that secured constitutional supermajority, which it has mostly retained to the present day.Footnote 2
Since returning to office (he had led the Hungarian government previously, from 1998 to 2002), Orbán has been working toward creating an authoritarian system.Footnote 3 His autocracy is not as dramatic as its predecessors, the twentieth-century style authoritarian systems. Opposition parties and candidates are not yet banned, and the regime does not keep hundreds in prison for political dissent. It is still possible to ‘protest by word of mouth …, or if all else fails, by the extreme form of exit, leaving the country’.Footnote 4 Yet, the election law tricks,Footnote 5 the campaign finance laws,Footnote 6 and the electoral bodies dominated by persons loyal to the leader may cast doubt on the fairness of the elections.Footnote 7 Moreover, there are no functioning checks on the executive. Many observers doubt the ordinary judiciary’s independence,Footnote 8 and hold that the Constitutional Court is effectively neutralised as a check on governmental power.Footnote 9
The rise of authoritarianism is closely related to Orbán’s political calculations, driven by a sole purpose: to retain power and control. The restrictive asylum laws and policies are just one instrument among the many used when convenient to serve this goal. The restrictions are not a result of the domestic law’s organic development or impacts of the EU acquis. They need not have happened, all the transit through Hungary of large numbers of irregular migrants in 2015 notwithstanding. Since 2010, Hungary’s approach to forced migration has been changed substantially: a genuine international commitment gave way to an exclusionist, ethnicist position.Footnote 10 This development has been coupled with the discourse of the ‘threatening other’. The ‘migrant’ in the political discourse is separated from its scholarly or legal meaning and is identified with a potential terrorist or at least a criminal, who at the same time threatens to overwhelm the thousand-year-old national ‘Christian’ culture and replace it with their own.
This chapter, first, locates this Orbanian discourse and measures it in a Schmittian paradigm. The theory of Carl Schmitt helps us make sense of Hungarian constitutional developments because Orbán has continuously concentrated on the political friend and the foe to maintain a permanent ‘crisis’ situation. Second, the chapter shows how the authoritarian goals determined the management of regular migration and the control of irregular migration and especially asylum. Most of the rules applicable during the fictitious ‘state of crisis caused by mass immigration’ contradict the EU measures and breach international asylum law. The changes introduced under the pretext of anti-pandemic measures in July 2020 eliminated access to protection.
One might wonder whether it makes a difference that all this is happening in an EU member state. The chapter argues that this ‘external constraining force’ is relevant both in the context of migration and the possibilities of democratic resistance.Footnote 11 There is a potential for legal resistance on the international and EU level, and domestically, techniques of resistance developed during feudalism (e.g., the tradition of free cities or ‘passive resistance’) and socialism (e.g., samizdat) are to be mixed with those based on the leftover of the rule of law regime.
8.2 Following the Schmittian Rulebook
Today, scholars identify the behaviour of authoritarian nationalists with the term ‘populism’. For instance, Lazaridis and KonstaFootnote 12 – after noting the divergent interpretations of the term ‘populism’Footnote 13 – set out three general characteristics of today’s populists: they speak on behalf of the national community as if it was a culturally, religiously, and linguistically homogenous genuine community sharing the same values; they accuse the political elite and the intellectuals of being undemocratic, ‘incapable, unproductive, and privileged, distant or alienated from the people, or lacking in the plebiscitarian quality of common sense’;Footnote 14 and identify a threatening other – one or more groups whose members allegedly undermine the community’s values or prosperity.
Indeed, today’s populist authoritarian nationalists concentrate on the concept of identity as a tool for determining who belongs to the mass that may be defined in ethnic, religious or linguistic terms. They use the language of the malign ‘other’, in which the other is a group considered not to belong to the mass because it differs in some key characteristics. However, this claim of today’s populist authoritarian nationalists is not new. They go back at least to Carl Schmitt’s interwar theory of ‘democracy’,Footnote 15 at the heart of which is the idea of a unified will of the homogeneous people, embodied in the unitary sovereign’s distinction between the friend and foe.Footnote 16 Schmitt held that democracy, properly understood, is an attempt to establish a ‘genuine identity’ between rulers and the ruled.Footnote 17 The ruled are the people who exist in their ethnic and cultural ‘oneness’,Footnote 18 which ensures the community’s strict internal homogeneity. The ruler may be a directly elected unitary sovereign who acts as an authentic representative of the people by symbolically incarnating the identity of the people and whose primary mission is to guarantee the political entity’s self-preservation.
The most appealing part of the Schmittian conception for today’s populist authoritarian nationalists is that at the basis of every constitution is an indispensable, unitary sovereign, who, at the moment of an unpredictable crisis, can break free of the rule of law and assert his pre-legal authority. This situation is what Schmitt calls the state of exception (Ausnahmezustand), which refers to a completely abnormal situation, where the continued application of the normal legal rules and rights prevents effective action from ending the exception.
Notably, there is a difference between the state of emergency and the state of exception. The notion of the state of emergency refers to public emergencies in democracies, such as national security crises, including, for instance, terrorist attacks, but also economic catastrophes and technological or natural disasters, such as pandemics. During a state of emergency, democratic state institutions function normally, although the distribution of power is modified in favour of the executive to manage the crisis. But a state of emergency provides only the conditions for exercising otherwise legitimate power. It is an underlying principle that ‘the executive is not permitted to use emergency powers to make any permanent changes in the legal/constitutional system’.Footnote 19 Thus, in a case of emergency, a democratic regime is typically a temporarily modified constitutional democracy. Some constitutional rights are restricted, with the primary purpose of emergency being to restore the democratic legal order and the full enjoyment of human rights.
Ausnahmezustand, however, is a lawless void when there is an order, but the order is not a normative, rather a factual one, where ‘the state remains, whereas law recedes’.Footnote 20 The application of the normal legal rules and rights is suspended by the unitary sovereign’s decision on the ground that the situation is abnormal: ‘The exception is that which cannot be subsumed: it defies general codification, but it simultaneously reveals a specifically juristic element – the decision in absolute purity’.Footnote 21 The unitary ‘sovereign is he who decides on the exception’Footnote 22 and on ‘whether the constitution needs to be suspended in its entirety’.Footnote 23 Thus, the state of exception is constituted by the sovereign’s personal decision: the sovereign decides both when there is a state of exception and how best to respond to that situation. That decision for Schmitt is one which is based on the political consideration of who is a friend and who is an enemy of the state.Footnote 24 Instead of openly discussing competing ideas in public, the uncontrolled sovereign has the exclusive power to make political distinctions between friend and foe constantly. Schmitt asserted that the differentiation of the people from the foe was inevitable because the foe threatened the existence of the political entity. However, the ‘existential’ enemy need not be an external one; he can very well be a domestic political opponent;Footnote 25 furthermore, he ‘need not be morally evil or aesthetically ugly, he need not appear as economic competitors, and it may even be advantageous to engage with him in business transactions’.Footnote 26
Hence, the distinction between the political friend and foe is needed to create a ‘crisis’ situation, where the ordinary norms are suspended. As we will see in the next section, a whole array of processes has been created in Hungary since 2010 in response to some ‘crisis’ situation.
8.3 In a Permanent State of Crisis
Already the 2011 constitution of the Orbán regime – officially named ‘Fundamental Law’ – was adopted with reference to a crisis: the 2008 global financial crisis and its consequences.Footnote 27 A couple of years later, citing the 2015 migrant crisis threat, the Hungarian government, alone in the EU, declared a mass migration emergency. Migration was not among the constitutionally listed situations that might justify the introduction of emergency rule. So, the government used article 15(1) of the Fundamental Law – ‘The government shall exercise powers which are not expressly conferred by laws on another state body’ – to declare a ‘state of crisis caused by mass immigration’,Footnote 28 entitling itself to suspend or deny fundamental rights not only to the ‘migrants’ but to the inhabitants of the country as well. The conditions of introducing the state of crisis have never been met, as neither the numbers required for its introduction materialised nor the threats that would entitle the government to announce it even if the number of arriving irregular migrants was below the threshold.Footnote 29 No other EU member state declared a state of crisis to deal with the refugee problem, not even states that were the ultimate destination of asylum-seekers. Although in 2019, the European Commission declared the migrant crisis to be over,Footnote 30 the Hungarian state of crisis is still in effect. The government renews it every six months, most recently on 3 September 2021, even though the border with Serbia is hermetically sealed, and in principle not a single irregular migrant can enter Hungary’s territory.Footnote 31
In addition to the ‘state of crisis caused by mass immigration’, a constitutional amendment was adopted to make it possible to declare a ‘state of a terrorist threat’ to ‘manage the adverse results from the migration crisis, including threats of terrorism’. This amendment followed the Schmittian tradition: it allowed the government to declare the ‘state of a terrorist threat’ on its own, and there was no need to have the Parliament’s approval; so the government could decide both that there was a threat and how to respond to it. All this happened in a country that has not seen a severe terror attack within its borders yet. Although the government, in a demagogic way, has connected the issue of migration with the problems of terrorism, militant fundamentalism is absent in the country.Footnote 32
Since 2015, Hungary has been in a permanent ‘state of crisis caused by mass immigration’. On top of that, in 2020, the government declared the ‘state of danger due to the coronavirus pandemic’, and later a third one, a ‘state of medical preparedness’.Footnote 33 And with a constitutional amendment,Footnote 34 a further step has been taken on the road to full-out authoritarianism. It broadens the situation in which emergencies can be declared, and government decrees become the default because the amendment erased any meaningful role for the Parliament.
In short, this section demonstrated that the way Hungary has declared a ‘state of crisis’ displays characteristics of the Schmittian state of exceptionFootnote 35 characterised by a de facto unlimited authority of the executive. Looking at the interrelationship of the democratic decay and the restrictive rules on forced migration facts suggest that the restrictive rules on migration emerged as part of the larger scheme aiming at the concentration of power and generating a loyal constituency, the loyalty of which derives from the vision of a leader who protects it from the ‘foe’.
8.4 Autocratisation in the Context of Migration
8.4.1 Constitutional Narratives and Developments
A discourse that securitises the ‘migrant’,Footnote 36 and represents the arriving irregular migrants as the threatening ‘other’ has dominated the Hungarian political scene since the 2015 arrival of asylum seekers.Footnote 37 The government has treated asylum seekers as foes labelling them as ‘migrants’,Footnote 38 and launched national consultations on ‘illegal migration’ and terrorism.Footnote 39 However, the threatening other is not just the ‘migrant’, but the ‘forces’ behind the migrant: the ‘financiers’, especially George Soros, the ‘pro-refugee’ NGOs in alliance with the political left.Footnote 40 The EU (‘Brussels’) is also the threatening other in the field of immigration, against which a firm immigration policy must be upheld.Footnote 41 Besides, those who insist on the idea of an open society and promote the ever closer union of the people of the EU are also collaborators against whom the ‘real’ patriots must ally.Footnote 42
This discourse enables the oppression of various democratic actors, including human rights defenders and NGOs helping refugees and creates synergies with other legal measures destroying constitutional democracy.Footnote 43 The protagonist of this discourse, Orbán’s government, claims to be the only force capable of containing the threat, with the help of the exceptional powers they vindicate.
A quick look at the constitutional developments related to migration and asylum reveals how the approach to migration has changed over time, how a genuine international commitment gave way to an exclusionist, ethnicist position. Until the 1989 democratic transition, the Hungarian constitution promised to ‘grant’ asylum to those who are persecuted for their activities promoting ‘democratic behaviour, social progress, the liberation of people and the defence of peace’.Footnote 44 The 1989 democratic constitution led to the gradual incorporation of the essential elements of the Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, albeit until 1997 it also recognised persecution based on ‘language’.Footnote 45 Asylum became a right, not an optionally ‘granted’ privilege. In 1997, a limitation on the right to asylum was introduced in the constitution based on the twin concepts of a safe country of origin and a safe third country. Asylum was to be granted only to those to whom these did not apply.Footnote 46 This restriction was in line with the emerging rules within the European Community as it was.Footnote 47
For years, the Fundamental Law contained the definition of the Geneva Convention entitling to asylum (with the above two exceptions) and the prohibition of mass expulsion and refoulement.Footnote 48 The text had not changed until 2018, when the Fundamental Law’s seventh amendment entered into force, introducing new rules on regular migration and asylum.Footnote 49 They stipulate in Article XIV (1), ‘No foreign population shall be settled in Hungary. A foreign national, not including persons who have the right to free movement and residence, may only live in the territory of Hungary under an application individually examined by the Hungarian authorities.’ The first sentence does not make sense since ‘foreign population’ is not an expression defined anywhere in Hungarian law, and ‘settling in’ does not have a meaning under migration law.Footnote 50 Thus, the whole sentence is a populist slogan with the undertone of protesting against possible relocation or resettlement due to an EU decision.Footnote 51
Paragraph (4) of the same article re-wrote asylum law and deviated from the Geneva Convention by adding the qualifier ‘direct’ to persecution. So ‘well-founded fear of direct persecution’ is required to qualify as a refugee. The rule contains another serious deviation from international law, as it excludes from refugee status and asylum any person who ‘arrived in the territory of Hungary through any country where he or she was not persecuted or directly threatened with persecution’. That is much less than a safe third country concept, especially as codified in the EU’s Procedure Directive (PD).Footnote 52 Subsidiary protection did not find its way into the Fundamental law; only minimalist non-refoulement rule is found in Article XIV (3).
8.4.2 Regular Migration
In the context of regular migration, the Hungarian immigration policy is ethnicist and economically utilitarian. In principle, the government has a migration policyFootnote 53 – at least with regards to inward migration – but the government never invokes that document, and the public discourse eliminates it as well.Footnote 54 Consequently, the Hungarian migration policy can only be deducted from the rules and the legal practices that, notably, entirely contradict the government rhetoric that condemns ‘migration’ in all of its forms.Footnote 55 In practice, Hungary encourages certain types of regular migration and actively seeks certain migrants from third countries. The ethnonationalist element is evident in the encouragement of the migration of those who were ‘formerly a Hungarian citizen and whose citizenship was terminated, or whose ascendant is or was a Hungarian citizen’.
The indirect inducement to immigration is also evident in the enhanced naturalisation of those ‘whose ascendant was a Hungarian citizen or who is able to substantiate of being of Hungarian origin … if he/she proves that he/she is sufficiently proficient in the Hungarian language’.Footnote 56 The rule’s focus is not on descendants of those former Hungarian citizens who became citizens of another country because of political changes they could not control but generally on transborder minorities. Since no time frame would restrict the tracing of Hungarian ancestry, the rule led to the naturalisation of more than one million foreigners, who are entitled to settle in Hungary.Footnote 57 They may also vote in the national elections without moving to Hungary.Footnote 58
Other examples of how Hungary encourages immigration include the ‘Stipendum Hungaricum’ program that aims at third-country nationals of less developed countries;Footnote 59 active programs to recruit foreign workers from third countries, like Serbia and Ukraine;Footnote 60 and the Hungarian Residency Bond Program that existed between 2013 and 2017.Footnote 61
8.4.3 Asylum
Whereas regular migration is governed with ethnicist or utilitarian economic preferences, without being admitted in government communication, the measures affecting asylum seekers and their helpers perfectly reflect the government’s intentions. It turns merciless when it comes to the so-called ‘irregular’ migrants.Footnote 62 The process may be dissected into four branches, each one of which will be addressed below.
8.4.3.1 The Ordinary Asylum System
The Asylum Act has been amended twenty-one times between January 2013 and August 2020, its implementing regulation twenty-three times.Footnote 63 The last amendment of the Act genuinely seeking harmony with the EU acquis was adopted in 2015 and improved asylum seekers’ access to the labour market, eliminated the concept of manifestly unfounded applications and replaced it with different accelerated procedures,Footnote 64 reflecting those in the PD.Footnote 65 Unaccompanied minors got better protection. The chance to re-open an abandoned procedure was also granted. All amendments after the Summer of 2015 were either technical (reflecting changes in the rules of administrative procedure and organisation) or were steps in destroying a fair and dignity-respecting asylum system.
The regular refugee status determination procedure still exists even if it has been rarely applied since 2015. It incorporates critical points that are relevant to the discussion of restrictive practices. Undocumented asylum-seekers who invoke persecution by a non-state actor may be obliged to contact their home country to prove their own identity.Footnote 66 Asylum detention was applied too widely.Footnote 67 Certain deadlines are very short. Appeals have no suspensive effect except in safe third-country cases and late-submission cases. Inadmissible are not only applications where the safe third-country clause could be invoked, but also in case the applicant arrived ‘through a country where he/she is not exposed to persecution … or to serious harm … or in the country through which the applicant arrived in Hungary adequate level of protection is available’.Footnote 68 A major concern was that courts had no right to overturn the administrative decision and recognise the applicant as a person in need of protection in an appeal against refusal at the administrative level. They could only return the case to the authority and order a new administrative procedure.Footnote 69 The ECJ in the Torubarov and PG cases found this in breach of the right to an effective remedy.Footnote 70 The ECJ declared that national courts must overturn the denials of protection if the case returns to them for a second time, after the administrative authority again rejects the application, in disregard of the first decision of the court overturning the original administrative decision. It can also be mentioned that in 2016, practically all integration assistance to persons recognised in need of protection was taken away.Footnote 71 Beneficiaries of international protection are allowed to stay in a reception centre for one month and receive fundamental health care for half a year. That is all.
The above concerns tend to be abstract in 2021 as the applicability of the rules to which they relate is essentially denied by the rules adopted in July 2020 to be discussed in the next Section. But even before 2021, they were hardly applied as most people were subject to the exceptional regime in place at times of ‘the state of crisis caused by mass immigration’.
8.4.3.2 The System Applicable during a ‘State of Crisis Caused by Mass Immigration’
The system established by Sections 80/A–80/K of the Asylum Act includes rules and measures that are incompatible with human rights principles and the international and EU asylum laws that bind Hungary.Footnote 72
The fence at the Hungarian-Serbian and the Hungarian-Croatian border was completed in 2015. They prevent access to the territory. Even if contacted by persons on the other side of the fences, the authorities ignore any expression of the wish to seek international protection in Hungary. According to Article 80/J, anyone found in an irregular situation within Hungary is to be ‘led through’ a gate in the fence, without the start of an asylum procedure or an aliens’ law procedure.Footnote 73 The removal measures are taken in the absence of any prior administrative or judicial decision. In essence, that is an extra-legal collective expulsion without any rule of law guarantee and any official record. Hence, asylum seekers are prevented from entering or are forcibly and informally removed.
After the Grand Chamber judgment in ND and NT v. Spain that unequivocally established Spanish jurisdiction in respect of those storming the Melila fence, there remains no doubt that persons on either side of the fence are under Hungarian jurisdiction (especially as they are on Hungarian territory on the Serbian side of the fence as well).Footnote 74 Therefore, being sent back to Serbia against their will – while being under the exclusive and continuous control of the Hungarian authorities – amounts to ‘expulsion’ for Article 4 of Protocol No 4. Moreover, this is corroborated by the judgement in the MK and others v. Poland case,Footnote 75 which leaves no doubt that returning asylum seekers from the border amounts to collective expulsion even in the case where a brief interview is conducted with them and the fact notwithstanding that the expulsion on each occasion may only affect a few persons.Footnote 76
The Grand Chamber’s reasoning in ND and NT that led to the finding that Spain has not violated the prohibition on collective expulsion does not apply to the Hungarian situation. In contrast to the Spanish situation (as interpreted by the Grand Chamber) in Hungary, there are no genuine and effective legal ways open to submit an asylum application when arriving at the border, and the individuals escorted to the border from inland had not been involved in a violent storming of the fence. At no point are apprehended persons subjected to any procedure, other than the ‘escort’ back to the door in the fence.Footnote 77
Moreover, it was recognised in the Grand Chamber judgment in the Ilias and Ahmed case that the return of asylum seekers from Hungary to Serbia entailed a threat of breach of Article 3 ECHR, and therefore could amount to refoulement, which was not the case in ND and NT in respect of Morocco.Footnote 78
Pushbacks have been accompanied by violent acts against irregular migrants.Footnote 79 Non-access to territory is accompanied by non-access to the procedure. Only one person per working day was admitted to each transit zone, limiting the applications to ten per week.Footnote 80 That practice certainly did not meet the requirement set out in the ND and NT judgment: the Schengen external border states must
make available genuine and effective access to means of legal entry, in particular border procedures for those who have arrived at the border. Those means should allow all persons who face persecution to submit an application for protection, based in particular on Article 3 of the Convention, under conditions which ensure that the application is processed in a manner consistent with the international norms, including the Convention.Footnote 81
The practice was that people forced back to Serbia have to wait months, if not years, to be allowed to enter the transit zone.Footnote 82
Even those who finally managed to enter the transit zone and submit an application faced further grave breaches of their human rights and EU entitlements. First, they were subjected to a procedure that is incompatible with the border procedure as enshrined in Article 43 of the PD, as the Hungarian ‘crisis procedure’ does not limit the detention to four weeks.Footnote 83 Second, the national procedure is incompatible with the rules on the detention of asylum seekers, as enshrined in Articles 8–11 of the RCD since it is extended to persons who do not fall into the taxatively listed six groups.Footnote 84 Moreover, the automatic detention of all asylum seekers entering from the Serbian side breached the obligation to consider alternatives to detention and to consider the option of detention only after an individual assessment.Footnote 85 Minors aged between fourteen and eighteen were also detained, which is not compatible with rules on persons with special reception needs.
Notably, the finding that the detention under the ‘crisis procedure’ is illegal does not contradict the ECtHR Grand Chamber judgment in the Ilias and Ahmed v. Hungary case.Footnote 86 That case dealt with detention in the border procedure and was related to a twenty-three-day-long holding of the two applicants in the transit zone. The court’s finding of no breach of Article 5 of the ECHR was based on a set of conditions, which are not present in the ‘crisis procedure’. This was clearly stated in FMS and others, the case in which the ECJ differentiated between the border procedure assessed in Ilias and Ahmed and the system applied during a ‘state of crisis caused by mass immigration.’Footnote 87 The ECJ found that the detention until the end of the procedure in merit following the admissibility phase is incompatible with both the PD and the RCD, as it is neither a border procedure nor does it meet the requirements of necessity and proportionality.Footnote 88
Another breach, going beyond illegal detention within the transit zone, was related to the treatment of the asylum seekers. Not only was the whole militarised set-up re-traumatising, especially to minors, but inhuman treatment was recurrent.Footnote 89 Asylum seekers whose application was declared inadmissible based on the presumption that Serbia had the responsibility to conduct their asylum procedure were repeatedly starved.Footnote 90 Initially, even those whose judicial appeal was still pending were deprived of food. Later the deprivation was limited to those whose application was finally rejected, and awaited removal.Footnote 91
Finally, the procedure followed during the ‘state of crisis caused by mass immigration’ as described here is incompatible with the PD and the more general human right to the fair procedure and the right to be heard. The Commission brought a case to the ECJ in 2018Footnote 92 in an infringement procedure that started in 2015.Footnote 93 In its 2020 judgment, the ECJ found that the extremely limited access to the transit zones and the impossibility to submit an application elsewhere, the detention in the transit zone and the pushback to Serbia were contrary to Articles 6, 24(3), 43 and 46(5) of the PD, Articles 8, 9 and 11 of the RD and Articles 5, 6(1), 12(1) and 13(1) of the Return Directive.Footnote 94
8.4.3.3 The Total Exclusion of Access to the Procedure and the Abolition of the Transit Zone System
The pandemic led to the total abolition of the access to procedure within the country, excluding even the transit zone, at first temporarily, till 31 December 2020 and later extended till 30 June 2021.Footnote 95 Accordingly, both the regular procedure and the crisis procedure remained part of the law; just their application is suspended in favour of a system, now incorporated into the Act LVIII on the Epidemiological Preparedness.Footnote 96 According to the Act, asylum applications cannot be submitted within Hungary unless someone is already enjoying subsidiary protection in Hungary, is a family member of a person enjoying international protection in Hungary, or is subjected to a law enforcement measure affecting her liberty. Every asylum seeker not belonging to these groups announcing her intention to seek protection is removed from Hungary in a summary procedure without any formality. The law is conspicuously silent about those legally present in Hungary and intending to submit an application. According to the rules, the only legal way to trigger an asylum procedure is by submitting a ‘declaration of intent’ at the Hungarian embassy in Kyiv or Belgrade. That embassy decides within sixty days whether to have a travel document issued to the future applicant, who then may travel to Hungary and express her intention to submit an actual asylum application.Footnote 97 The person may be detained for four weeks without any individual deliberation of the necessity and proportionality of detention. The fact that she arrived legally with the travel document issued by the Hungarian embassy is irrelevant.Footnote 98 Both the UNHCR and the Hungarian Helsinki Committee were quick to condemn the new system and demand its withdrawal.Footnote 99
8.4.3.4 Criminalisation of Migrants and NGOs and Other Threats
Hungary is not the only state that adopts ever more measures to exclude asylum seekers and shift responsibility to third countries. What is relatively specific in its process of autocratisation is that Hungary also attacks NGOs and other actors that may help secure the exercise of human rights and refugee rights.Footnote 100
Securitisation comes hand in hand with crimmigration,Footnote 101 the introduction of criminal law tools to govern migration and deter stakeholders who oppose government policies. Migration control is an administrative (public law) matter as is amply corroborated by the ECtHR practice in its refusal to apply Article 6 of the ECHR to it. Nevertheless, in 2015, Hungary reverted to the criminalisation of irregular border crossing at sections where there was a fence. A maximum of three years imprisonment threatens all who cross the fence illegally. Not only are the asylum seekers criminalised, which is contrary to Article 31 of the Geneva Convention, but NGOs assisting asylum seekers also face criminal threats. On top of human smuggling and facilitation of illegal residence, ‘aiding and abetting illegal immigration’ also became a crime,Footnote 102 the core of which is ‘organisational activity’ that is perpetrated in order to
(a) enable the initiating of an asylum procedure in Hungary by a person who in their country of origin or in the country of their habitual residence or another country via which they had arrived, is not exposed to persecution for reasons of race, nationality, membership of a particular social group, religion or political opinion, or their fear of direct persecution is not well-founded,
(b) or in order for the person entering Hungary illegally or residing in Hungary illegally, to obtain a residence permit.
Organisational activity is not defined exhaustively, but includes border surveillance, producing or commissioning information material or the dissemination thereof, and ‘building or operating a network’.Footnote 103
This crime has a clear goal: general deterrence, not aimed at criminals but at NGOs providing information and assistance to irregular migrants of whom they cannot yet know if they will apply for international protection in Hungary, and if they do apply, whether they will be recognised. The new crime contains terms that can hardly be operationalised to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the crime had been committed; therefore, it may deter from a wide range of actions that should normally be perfectly legal, like informing asylum seekers about their rights or feeding them. The Commission has started an infringement procedure that was referred to the ECJ on 29 July 2019.Footnote 104 The Hungarian Constitutional Court, however, maintained the semantic fog when it did not quash down the crime as unconstitutional but exempted from the crime the conduct that amounts to ‘carrying out the altruistic obligation of helping the vulnerable and the poor’.Footnote 105
There are two more measures against civil society indicative of an autocratisation. Act LXXVI of 2017 on the ‘transparency’ of organisations that receive support from abroad in the value of 27,000 euros or more per year requires civil society organisations – except for sports, religious and minority associations and foundations – to register and reveal their supporters. They are also obliged to indicate on all publications and web appearances that they are supported from abroad. A month after adopting the Act, the Commission started an infringement procedure that led the ECJ to conclude that it ‘has introduced discriminatory and unjustified restrictions on foreign donations to civil society organisations’.Footnote 106
In addition to the criminalisation of assistance, a ‘special tax on immigration’ was introduced. It is to be levied on ‘immigration supporting activities’ as ‘carrying out media campaigns and media seminars and participating in such activities; organising education; building and operating networks or propaganda activities that portray immigration in a positive light’ that is directly or indirectly aimed at promoting immigration defined in the Act as ‘the permanent relocation of people from their country of residence to another country’ except in case of persons enjoying EU free movement rights.Footnote 107 This tax is a means to deter as its formal applicability is minimal. In principle, the twenty-five per cent tax was only to be levied on activities supporting the permanent immigration of third-country nationals in Hungary; however, the meaning of ‘permanent relocation’ is unclear and fluid.
The criminalisation of civil society organisations is yet another link between democratic decay and restrictive migration policy. The government did not need it to limit the number of arriving asylum seekers – that could be achieved by the fence, the criminalisation of their irregular entry through it and the systemic detention and return to Serbia. Threatening the civil society organisations with criminal sanctions and punitive taxes is part of the Schmittian political project of creating foes, identifying the ‘mercenaries of [George] Soros’ against whom the leader protects his nation.Footnote 108
8.5 Possibilities for Democratic and Legal Resistance
The democratic decay and the dismantling of the rule of law leaves little room for legal resistance and resilience. It promotes (so far peaceful) forms of democratic resistance. Let us briefly mention the latter before turning to the possibilities of the legal action.
According to medieval traditions, free cities may function as islands of freedom and may even exercise self-governance.Footnote 109 The cities under opposition rule may stop the harassment of visible minorities, press the law enforcement agencies to take measures against xenophobic insults or crimes and offer NGO’s various forms of material support such as office space and access to local media. Symbolic measures of the mayor and the cities’ counsellors may refute and delegitimise the government’s ethnicist, populist propaganda. An example of such a measure is raising the EU flag again on local government buildings that had disappeared from the Parliament and the central government’s buildings long ago. Cities may shelter those few refugees who were recognised but had to leave the reception centre after thirty days without any integration assistance. Human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of (local) law and respect for human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities, may be respected and exercised locally.
Yet another form of resistance (widespread during Socialism) is maintaining an ‘alternative’ sphere of public information. Social media partly naturally provides it, but a ‘samizdat’ is again in circulation, and Radio Free Europe is back on the scene.Footnote 110 Besides, German state broadcaster Deutsche Welle announced the launch of Hungarian-language news programmes.Footnote 111 Solidarity, among NGOs under pressure has gained importance, as seen, for example, in the concerted refusal to register as foreign-funded organisations.
Turning to the classical legal tactics, one may note that on the ruins of the rule of law, a few remaining independent regular courts may still protect the integrity of EU law and the interest of asylum seekers to find protection, for example, by finding that Serbia is not a safe third country, contrary to the claims of the government. Similarly, not ordering detention is within the power of an independent judge. After the Torubarov judgment, courts once again may overturn the administrative decision if the authority does not change it to recognition after the first sending back.
It is clear, though, that domestic democratic resistance would not be viable without external support. For instance, EU institutions might take a more decisive role in supporting Hungary’s re-democratisation. The reality of the ongoing Article 7(1) procedure against Hungary to date is anything but ‘nuclear’.Footnote 112 It so far somewhat resembles a blunt arrow. Yet, replacing Article 7 with newer mechanisms like the ‘peer review procedure’ entailing a regular review of each member state’s rule of law performance is not a solution. Instead, European politicians should use the existing tools and improve Article 7 procedure by working transparently and using internal expertise of the European Parliament and external expertise of Council of Europe bodies. All the three major institutions of the EU (Commission, Council and the Parliament) are currently subject to serious criticism concerning their inefficient actions to stop autocratisation. It is not the task here to engage the literature on strengthening the EU to reinstate the rule of law and respect of the European values.Footnote 113 Nevertheless, four short remarks may be appropriate.
First, if the effet utile principle was to be applied, Hungary cannot veto the application of Article 7(2) TEU. According to this provision, the European Council may determine the existence of a serious and persistent breach by a member state of the values referred to in Article 2 TEU. After that, the Council could adopt effective sanctions.
Second, as guardian of the Treaty, the Commission has a duty to ensure the uniform enforcement of EU law, including the rule of law. The best tool the Commission has at its disposal to enforce it is the infringement action, which may be made more powerful to be ‘systemic’.Footnote 114 While infringement actions have not so far been used effectively to challenge the autocratic consolidation of a member state, the ECJ has strongly hinted that it would be open to such a challenge.Footnote 115
Third, the intensified use of interstate disputes under Article 259 TFEU might also be used more frequently. The article allows the EU member states to take action even when the EU Commission does not support the claim.Footnote 116
Fourth, budget conditionality rules linked to the rule of law are now one of the EU toolbox items. Disbursement of EU funds from the budget and Next Generation EU is tied to respect for the rule of law standards. However, its application is suspended until the ECJ has greenlighted it,Footnote 117 which is legally questionable and in violation of the EU’s system of checks and balances.Footnote 118
Significantly, however, external support in re-democratisation is not limited to the EU. European and global institutions are instrumental, although their role cannot be examined here in detail.
The ECtHR is certainly a candidate to act as a force resisting democratic decay and restrictive migration policy. Until the Grand Chamber decision in Ilias and Ahmed, it did well in condemning the protean forms of detention of asylum seekers and migrants without the right to stay in Hungary, but on the more general front of resisting democratic backsliding, its record is less impressive.Footnote 119 The ECtHR has never addressed the structural constitutional changes that happened during the last decade in Hungary. A few ECtHR judgements affected various aspects of the Hungarian autocratisation process, but either they failed to require the government to make structural changes,Footnote 120 or the government refused the legal change required by the ECtHR.Footnote 121
Another short remark relates to the relative passivity of UNHCR that runs an office in Budapest and is, therefore, a close witness of the agony of the Hungarian asylum system. True, at crucial points, UNHCR has raised its voice. However, UNHCR has not been part of the visible public discourse regarding the situation; its representatives do not sit on public panels; neither do they give interviews. The reason is that UNHCR fears that it would lose access to the transit zones if it had a less low-key policy. UNHCR also believes that no rational debate with government propaganda is possible at the moment. That may be true, but one still wonders if a more direct challenge of the government could not improve the public image of asylum seekers and refugees and undermine the stream of fake news and the xenophobic framing that is part of the government indoctrination.
8.6 Conclusion
The rise of ethnonational populism and the phenomenon of autocratisation are subject to an ocean of literature. Most of it describes and analyses the Hungarian constitutional and legal changes, and some search for their causes. This chapter does not focus on these matters; instead, it gives an overview of the constitutional changes regarding migration, the abolition of the functioning asylum system and the framing of migration as a threat against which Hungary must ‘protect’ itself.
The chapter argues that the constitutional changes introduced by Orbán’s authoritarian regime can be interpreted in a Schmittian paradigm. An ever-increasing number of enemies had to be found against which the government (relying on its overweight in Parliament) equipped itself with practically unlimited powers, by way of introducing special legal orders (more specifically, by declaring a state of crisis), either by amending the Fundamental Law, or merely de facto, by ordinary Acts or even government decrees. The government has used the ‘crisis’ that has never existed to ‘justify’ the exceptional and inhuman practice developed in the transit zone, which has recently been replaced by a total ban on applying for asylum in Hungary or at its borders.
The chapter suggests that the abolition of the asylum system did not follow either from the development of the EU acquis or the large-scale arrivals in 2015, which only led to around 5000 substantive refugee status determination procedures that year and much less in the following years.Footnote 122 Other states where large numbers of asylum applications were submitted may have tried to avoid the increase in numbers. However, contrary to Hungary, they have not given up on the idea of a fully-fledged refugee status determination procedure. The elimination of a regular procedure guaranteeing the required reception did not follow from an internal ‘organic’ development of the Hungarian refugee law either. Hungarian asylum law was generous in some periods, especially in the early nineties and then again after the first formal Asylum Act. It only gradually became tighter, but still within the bounds of the EU acquis, perhaps except the extensive use of detention.Footnote 123
Finally, the chapter addresses the strategies the civil society and the remaining independent institutions may consider when resisting autocratisation. As it is clear by now, Orbán has sacrificed the rule of law and the functioning democracy with a decent asylum system and presented migration as a threat to perpetuate a crisis that calls for the leader with extra-ordinary capabilities to protect his people. In exchange, blind trust and exceptional powers were to be offered, replacing rational discourse and a state operating within the bounds of fundamental rights, democracy, and the rule of law. The minority of the voters wanted that, but due to the electoral system, most parliamentarians are willing to maintain it in exchange for the goodwill (and rewards) offered by their (party) leader. Under these circumstances, democratic resistance and legal action may be needed. Both have limited and ever-narrowing space. As doubts arose concerning the meaningful support from the international and EU institutions, no guarantee is within sight against the continuing autocratisation that only used restrictive migration and asylum law and policy as a vehicle to promote its purely political, Schmittian goals, essentially determined by the person of Viktor Orbán.