A. Introduction
Schrödinger’s cat has an amazing capacity to be alive and dead at the same time. This may also be true for the Hungarian legal system and its backbone, the judiciary. On the one hand, it is claimed to be in its best shape, and any allegations to the contrary are asserted to be purely political criticism, entirely neglecting legal methodology.Footnote 1 On the other hand, it is also alleged that judicial independence in authoritarian or hybrid systemsFootnote 2 is nothing more than a façade, and that going on behind the scenes is a complex and subtle system of personal networks, loyalties, favors, deterrents, and intimidation capable of influencing judicial decision-making in politically sensitive cases.Footnote 3 Taking into account the fact that mere membership of the European Union is an obvious constraint requiring at least some kind of appearance of judicial independence to be maintained,Footnote 4 both claims may be true at the same time, and the judiciary—like the famous cat—may simultaneously be dead and alive. The institutional arrangement as envisaged “on paper” may comply more or less with the requirements of the Rule of Law and the independence of the judiciary, while it may also contain gaps and loopholes which may be abused in the “particular legal and institutional context of a Member State,”Footnote 5 allowing the system to be rigged or hacked if necessary.Footnote 6
At this point, some clarifications are needed. First, as earlier research has also shown, the judiciary in an autocratic system has the different and slightly incompatible functions of social control and strengthening “legal” legitimacy.Footnote 7 In order to achieve both of them, there is no need to influence or interest in influencing each and every pending case, but only the relatively few which are important for political or economic reasons. These are often interwoven in hybrid regimes like Hungary. Routine, unimportant cases can be dealt with by an independent judiciary without any political meddling. The cases requiring special attention concern either political power—elections, referenda, niceties of lawmaking—civil control over politics—civil society,Footnote 8 freedom of information, transparency, and media—the economic foundations of political power—public procurement, state aids, misappropriation of funds, bid rigging, and a few other high-profile economic criminal cases—or are closely connected with rent-seeking—monopolies, dominant positions, concessions, or infrastructure. Interestingly, most of these cases are concentrated in the Metropolitan area because the central governmental institutions are there. In other cases, the judiciary may work without any external influence and the government may even be interested to keep up the façade of independence. So, it seems that impressions of the judiciary may very well depend on the very court or the very case being scrutinized. As with the famous cat, we do not know if she is dead or alive until we open the box.
For the external constraints on the political system, a very delicate mix of instruments is needed. Some tools are necessary which on the blueprint look harmless—mainly dull technicalities also serving legitimate aims which also allow the plausible denial of any wrongdoing—but can be turned inside out in order to influence some cases. Moreover, it is also necessary to have a trusted network of persons to use those tools, which requires the capturing of the most important managerial positions—presidents of the courts and the Head of the NJO—and appointment of reliable judges to some key positions who then can abuse the formal rules.Footnote 9 This again makes it much more complicated to answer the question whether the cat is dead or alive because all the techniques to be discussed in this article are legal in some sense and—taken out of context—even serve a reasonable purpose. Therefore, a very thin, classical, positivist understanding of the rule of law is the bulwark of the whole systemFootnote 10 because judges cannot be independent of the law itself. The legal toolkit cannot be separated from those who operate it, and, therefore, it is convenient to start with them, B, later introduce the most important instruments, C, and eventually hopefully answer the question whether the cat is dead or alive, D.
B. The Key Actors
As will be shown, the tools are in the hands of a few key actors: The Head of the National Judicial Office (NJO), the President of the Supreme Court, and the members of the Constitutional Court. The appointments to these key positions become heavily politicized,Footnote 11 and are based on personal trust and loyalty, which need to be proven before and during their tenure. The clientelist selection mechanism, overlapping responsibilities, and the ongoing testing of loyalty are the basic characteristics of the political system.Footnote 12 Power and influence ebb and flow as reward or penalty.Footnote 13
The window of opportunity for packing the courts was opened by the Hungarian Civic Alliance’s (FIDESZ) landslide victory in 2010, enabling the amendment of the constitution, the passing of the Act on the Judiciary and that on Judges, and the forcing of the retirement of a large proportion of judges.Footnote 14 Most senior and managerial positions were made vacant and ready for grabbing by the application of the newly adopted rules.Footnote 15 This maneuver was also facilitated and legitimizedFootnote 16 by the former corporatist tendencies of judicial self-government between 1997 and 2010,Footnote 17 making the judiciary fit for a redesign anyway and even helping to bring on board judges disappointed with those malfunctions.
I. The Head of the NJO and the Regional Court Presidents
The presidents of the 20 regional courts (törvényszék) and of the five Higher Courts of Appeal (ítélőtábla) play a crucial role in the judiciary:Footnote 18 They decide on and influence the working conditions of the judges at a court, serve as transmission mechanisms between the regional and central levels,Footnote 19 communicate and execute the wishes of the central authorities at the regional level, and inform central authorities about the workings of the regional ones.Footnote 20 Moreover, they influence not only the given regional court but also the first instance county courts (járásbíróság) and have a decisive influence over their everyday lives.
The Head of the NJO had a decisive influence on the appointment of the court presidents, enabling her to fill those positions with loyalists.Footnote 21 This personal bond has been strengthened also by the fact that the regional court presidents are basically accountable only to the Head of the NJO.Footnote 22 They enjoy disproportionately higher salaries and much better working conditions than rank-and-file judges, and often receive targeted bonuses also thanks to the Head of the NJO, which further supports their good relations.Footnote 23 The Head of the NJO is hence a crucial player but was for a long time basically unaccountable to anybody.Footnote 24 This unusual institutional blueprint must have been created in anticipation of handpicking trusted allies.Footnote 25 In order to unlock EU money, the NJC was granted more stringent oversight and access to the NJO’s files in 2023. At the moment of writing, this needs to be implemented, and, therefore, its impact is hard to assess.
II. The Supreme Court President
Although there were no written rules to require it, a conventional rule has been established that the President of the Supreme Court is elected from among the sitting judges of the Supreme Court.Footnote 26 On the one hand, this was observed even under the communist regime and had a clear rationale: Effective leadership requires reputation, which is ensured by a successful judicial career. On the other hand, this unwritten rule supports incumbents, insider interests, and the maintaining of the status quo. The first breach occurred in 2008 when the then President Sólyom, who had a clear interest in changing the corporativist structures of the Supreme Court, nominated President Mr. BakaFootnote 27 who, although he had been a judge of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) for 16 years, lacked experience within the Hungarian judiciary. This circumstance was heavily criticized, and the nominee was declined twice and elected only at the third attempt under the pretext that he had in the meantime gained relevant experience between the first and the third nominations he served at the Supreme Court.
In 2011, the former conventional rule was formalized, and five years of experience on national benches was required by law—a fact which ruled Mr. Baka out, and a new Chief Justice, Mr. Darák, was elected.Footnote 28 Nonetheless, he also proved himself to be driven more by professional ethics than by political expectations, and, therefore, the law was amended again to pave the way for Mr. Varga, who had earlier been a prosecutor and a constitutional justice but had never served on the bench.Footnote 29 The National Judicial Council (Országos Bírói Tanács) (NJC) criticized the nominee for his lack of judicial experience and expressed the view that all former Presidents had had that necessary professional background, showing that the conventional rule was considered to be binding irrespective of parliamentary enactments. The controversial appointment of the new Chief Justice seemed also to undermine his legitimacyFootnote 30 and resulted in ongoing conflicts within the Kúria itself and between it and the NJC.Footnote 31 In 2023, the rules were amended, and the NJC must now confirm the candidate’s independence and integrity—a requirement which it is hoped will depoliticize the nomination process.
III. Constitutional Court Judges
The appointment of constitutional court justices has been subject to political memoranda, practices, and usages since the court was established in 1989 in order to keep the balance between the opposition and the ruling parties, so five were elected before the first free elections on a parity basis and another five after those elections. Candidates were nominated by a parliamentary ad hoc committee composed of all parliamentary parties on an equal footing and elected by a two-thirds majority of the Parliament. This two-step process required a wide consensus among the parliamentary parties. This resulted in a modus operandi whereby the opposition and the government could nominate an equal number of justices, but it was unfortunately not always observedFootnote 32 and opposition candidates were sometimes not elected. This, logically, deepened the distrust between the parties and prompted a further conventional usage, namely, that the opposition nominees are the first to be voted on to avoid governmental cheating. After 2010, the ad hoc nomination committee has not been composed of equal numbers from the various parties. This made it possible to select justices without the consent of the opposition, which is an atrophy of the former conventional rules.Footnote 33 Furthermore, the President of the Constitutional Court is no longer elected by the members of the court but by the Parliament directly, enabling a trusted person to be selected for the influential tasks of agenda-setting and case allocation.
Although nomination demanded a hearing before the Parliamentary Committee for Justice, its standards were not laid down, fostering an arcane process of endorsement of the candidates.Footnote 34 The secretive hearings supported the impression that the whole procedure was political horse-trading. The lack of conventional rules on how to vet candidates also made it easier after 2010 to establish a lopsided selection process which preferred governmental candidates irrespective of their merits.
Thanks to these changes, a gradual courtpacking became possible.Footnote 35 Unlike in 2010–2014, which was hallmarked by open conflicts and drastic cuts in the powers and influence of the Constitutional Court,Footnote 36 the government has relied more and more on the Constitutional Court since 2015. Abstract interpretations of the Basic Law were requested in politically very sensitive questions, and the government has always received the answer it hoped for.Footnote 37 In tandem with that, the Constitutional Court received some new powers—for example, constitutional complaint of governmental bodies.Footnote 38 These circumstances reinforce that members of the Constitutional Court were elected primarily on the basis of their political orientation,Footnote 39 and show that the institutional and personal changes went hand in hand, and formal changes followed and backed up the informal relations. The lower courts are aware of this fact and do not expect decisions from the Constitutional Court that are contrary to governmental interests, which also makes them reluctant to turn to the Constitutional Court.
C. The Tools
Meddling with judges and the judiciary is difficult: They are trained to be independent, work in chambers of different sizes, their decisions are subject to review nationally and internationally, and, hence, it seems to be hard to grasp the whole organization. The Hungarian example shows, however, that full control is not necessary: The politically sensitive cases are few in number and can nonetheless be managed. The easiest and most convenient way is to prevent them from reaching the judiciary at all—I. Gatekeeping.Footnote 40 If that is not possible, they need to be channeled to trustworthy or conforming judges who know how to handle them—II. Channeling. A further alternative is to enhance pressure on judges—III. Sticks and Carrots—and, if nothing helps, some emergency mechanisms are necessary to avoid mishaps occurring—IV. Emergency Brakes. Last but not least, judicial appointments and promotions help to recruit the right chap for the right job and gradually shape the judiciary—V. Appointments and Selection.
I. Gatekeeping
A criminal trial takes place basically if governmental bodies want it to: The police investigate and, with a few exceptions, the state attorney has an exclusive right to charge somebody; to qualify the wrongdoing and, in doing so, the upper limit of the punishment; or to drop the case entirely.Footnote 41 There is no need to tussle with criminal judges if one can keep the charges at bay. And the hierarchically organized prosecution service is an ideal gatekeeper of criminal investigation.Footnote 42 It would, however, be a misperception to think that this necessarily means full immunity: One may fry only the little fish, pick less serious charges, offer an advantageous plea bargain, sabotage the investigation, or commit procedural failures leading to much more lenient punishments than would otherwise be imaginable.
In administrative cases, the most widespread strategies are legalization and prevention. “Legalization” is autocratic legalismFootnote 43 in everyday situations: Exempting something from the generally applicable legal requirements mainly by declaring it to be of major national interest, which not only streamlines the procedures but also makes litigation futile. The legalization of non-complianceFootnote 44 ties the hands of the Weberian judgesFootnote 45 and makes court proceedings futile. The second strategy, prevention, aims to limit access to justice by setting short time limits or exorbitantly high fees or reducing the number of causes of illegality—for example public procurements—which has a chilling effect, especially if the governmental bodies win in more than 90% of the cases.
II. Channeling the Cases—A Semi-Automatic Case Allocation with Loopholes
Automatic or randomized case allocation is basically not traditional in Hungary, and that lack of awareness may explain why non-compliance does not often make waves. During the communist regime cases were manually allocated by the court presidents, underlining their crucial administrative position.Footnote 46 Although the political micromanagement of the judiciary has been considerably reduced since the 1970s, there have been loyal judges at every courthouse ready to do the party’s bidding if it was asked for, and sensitive cases have been allocated to them.Footnote 47 The rest could be handled by others, reinforcing some sense of socialist legality.Footnote 48
Albeit the randomized case allocation was widely acknowledged as a procedural safeguard,Footnote 49 it was introduced into Hungary only belatedly, sporadically, and half-heartedly, and the case allocation regime could be different not only between courts but also within different parts of a given court.Footnote 50 The fact that manual allocation still lingered was often justified by the devilish combination of ever-changing legal provisions and the lack of professional experience, so that only very few judges were allegedly capable of handling some particular types of cases.Footnote 51 This worked perfectly as a pretext for retaining the influence of court presidents.
In 1997, as part of the necessary judicial reforms, new rules were introduced that required the installation in advance of a case allocation scheme for the next year to provide some guarantee against arbitrariness.Footnote 52 It was, however, not fully randomized, allowed for exceptions, and enabled the courts to carry on with their existing informal practices.Footnote 53 There was no remedy available either against the scheme itself or against any deviations from it. The not fully randomized case allocation also survived the judicial reform of 2011. The allocation scheme can be updated or amended in case of unforeseen circumstances substantially influencing the caseload or for other important reasons. These are not considered as a violation of the right to a lawful judge.Footnote 54 The adjustments and deviations always take place for a formally legal purpose, like illness, caseload management, secondment, or the transfer of judges, with their agreement, to another court to reduce its caseload, factors which necessarily affect the composition of the court.Footnote 55 Because career decisions and judges’ transfers are managed by the NJO, a quid pro quo obligation can easily be created. Several high-flyer judges agreed to be transferred which makes the allegations plausible that they could expect some reward.Footnote 56 So, these blanket exceptions serve as perfect smokescreens, and sensitive cases are claimed to be channeled on the basis of interest or previous behavior—for example, requesting preliminary rulings from the ECJ. Footnote 57 Case allocation at the Kúria, but not at other courts, has now been fully automatized.
Between 2019 and 2020, the members of the Special Chamber for Law UnificationFootnote 58 were chosen ad hoc by the President of the Kúria. He or his Deputy convened these chambers, and there was no rule how judge rapporteurs are selected. This obviously enabled them to hand-pick the panel, which made a mockery of the right to a tribunal established by law.Footnote 59 Due to heavy criticism from the Venice Commission,Footnote 60 two permanent chambers of 21 members each have been created, composed of Chamber and College Presidents, irrespective of their field of expertise, and chaired by the President or Vice President of the Kúria.Footnote 61 Case allocation between them is fully randomized. There are two different strategies here: The first is a primitive hand-picking, while the second is a more sophisticated one, which undermines the conditions of a meaningful discussion. The chambers are artificially ballooned up and members are not selected by specialization, which reduces the number of judges capable of meaningful discussion to a handful. This helps the chair to dominate deliberations. Interestingly, this second solution was blessed by the EU in 2023.
Automatic case allocation has never applied to the Constitutional Court. Like many other procedural questions, this one was also left for the Rules of Procedure, which were never enacted,Footnote 62 making space for informal practices. Usually, the President allocated cases on the basis of professional expertise, reliability, and political preferences, which allowed him often to keep the most delicate ones for himself.Footnote 63 This practice was codified in 2011, and the most politically sensitive cases overwhelmingly end up on the President’s desk. One of the best examples is probably the invention of constitutional identity, as a possible shield against the primacy of EU law. The President appointed himself as judge rapporteur for a far-reaching decision, although he was no expert on European constitutional law, did not publish in this field, and, in general, had a rather poor academic record.Footnote 64
III. Sticks and Carrots
1. Disciplinary Mechanisms—Formal and Informal
Court presidents have the power to initiate disciplinary proceedings, and only a few vague criteria govern the exercise of those powers. A ground for initiating disciplinary proceedings might be flagrant disregard of a judge’s official duties, including deadlines or violation of the Judicial Code of Ethics or the Code of Integrity, which are soft-law instruments filling gaps in the law, but they may also have negative effects on judicial behavior. A very telling example was a roundtable talk about the situation of the judiciary in Poland to which a judge of the NJC was invited. The Chief Justice hinted that such activity might be seen as a political one triggering disciplinary proceedings.Footnote 65
On the one hand, apart from the official mechanisms, there are also several tools “under the radar”: Flooding judges with expeditious, urgent, or voluminous cases—especially before the evaluation of their work—in order to persuade them to mind their own business and not care about other activities;Footnote 66 withholding appointments; not allowing extra-judicial activities like education; and not extending deadlines reconsidering home office, which can make life uncomfortable and can be used as a quasi-disciplinary measure. On the other hand, these informal tools are often used as reasonable warning signals that the judges primarily focus on their own work and keep professional standards—deadlines or caseload.
The link between formality and informality shows how judges were punished for requesting preliminary rulings from the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in sensitive issues. First, Gabriella Szabó’s temporary tenure was not made permanent after she questioned the legality of the government’s migration policy before the CJEU. The topic dominated politics since 2015, prompted open conflict with the EU, and was the central topic of the 2018 election. Under these political circumstances, as a freshly appointed administrative judge, she requested a preliminary ruling on the Hungarian push-back migration system.Footnote 67 She claimed that her judicial appointment was not confirmed after the probation period precisely because of that request.Footnote 68 Her allegations seemed to be justified by the political importance of the issue: She was harassed by government-friendly media and labeled as a foreign agent,Footnote 69 and the Government asserted that a ruling of the CJEU on the same issueFootnote 70 was incompatible with Hungary’s constitutional identity.Footnote 71 Although the failure to confirm her appointment was formally legal, many judges took note of her fate and understood the lesson.Footnote 72
Second, Csaba Vasvári requested a preliminary ruling regarding his own independence.Footnote 73 The General Attorney wanted to annul that request, which succeeded, and the President of the Fővárosi Törvényszék (Metropolitan Court) initiated disciplinary proceedings against the judge.Footnote 74 Interestingly enough, he was the judge whose promotion had several times been invalidated by the Head of the NJO, who had also circumvented the regular appointment procedure as she temporarily—later permanently—appointed the President of the Fővárosi Törvényszék. The connection between disciplinary proceedings, the temporary appointment, and the invalidated application cannot be proven. Nonetheless, the coincidences are suspicious, and it is doubtful whether the disciplinary measure against such a very well-qualified judge could have been initiated without some support from the NJO.Footnote 75
These cases received wide attention and illustrate very well how judges may face serious consequences for not toeing the line, and they may also justify other allegations of the arbitrary treatment of judges.
2. Bonuses, Rewards, Acknowledgements
The reverse side of disciplinary measures is pay. The same court presidents who can initiate disciplinary measures are also entitled to reward extraordinary effort or achievement, like advanced university degrees, something which it is reported they often do secretly. Requests for information on this subject are usually declined by invoking the ex gratia nature of the rewards or the privacy of the beneficiaries.Footnote 76 This gives the impression of arbitrariness and the purchase of loyalty. The financial rewards are kept in check only by the Head of the NJO, a fact which shows the close interconnectedness of the NJO and the regional court presidents.Footnote 77 In 2023, the NJC obtained access to the files and influence over the distribution of bonuses, so that will probably weaken the informal influence.
3. Commenting on Cases—Pressure from Outside
Commenting on current judicial procedures, anticipating the course of a trial, and predicting or expecting a given outcome may be subject to the sub judice rule in common law jurisdictions, which aim to protect judges from extraneous influences or becoming biased. This is not observed in Hungary.
The Prime Minister is ready to openly criticize a judgment, to question the intellectual capacity of judges, or to describe a decision as incorrect and not to respect it.Footnote 78 He is also keen to welcome a decision as “an enormous amount of help in the battle . . . in Brussels,”Footnote 79 or to air his preferred outcome.Footnote 80 Government-friendly think tanks or media outlets often condemn judges, courts, or decisions, and label them as politically influenced.Footnote 81 These comments go beyond the sensationalist journalism of tabloid newspapers and create an atmosphere in which judges know what is expected of them or simply face massive pressure from social media to decide a case in a particular way. Such behavior undermines trust in the judiciary.
Moreover, judges are rarely protected from such attacks,Footnote 82 and those who should protect them—the Head of the NJO or the President of the Kúria Footnote 83 —are appointed by the Parliament and are apparently not eager to do so because that could lead to the end of a promising career. These attacks may even be useful to them to suppress opposition within the judiciary.
IV. Emergency Brakes
Because there needs to be some appearance of judicial independence, not every case can be routed to conformist judges, and some hard-nosed judges are impervious to sticks and carrots—cases sometimes do not turn out as expected. Nonetheless, the judiciary is a hierarchical organization after all, with a Supreme Court at its apex. If the Supreme Court is captured, the “judicial mishaps” can be corrected there. The same applies for the Constitutional Court.
Therefore, special remedies are created which direct the cases to trustworthy and reliable persons. These mechanisms—at least at first glance—serve legitimate aims or are similar to legitimate mechanisms known in other countries.Footnote 84 Their abuse for political aims can usually be detected by a timely coincidence between the amendment of some technicalities and the composition of the court. Two such mechanisms can be detected in Hungary: The misuse of law uniformity procedures and that of the constitutional complaint.
1. Uniform Application of the Law
Equal and uniform application of the law is a legitimate objective,Footnote 85 and many legal systems have some remedy with this aim.Footnote 86 Uniformity in Hungary has a very strong tradition going back to Soviet law,Footnote 87 and different tools and mechanisms have been adopted to achieve it which have also served political aims.Footnote 88 These were called guidelines (irányelv) and decisions in principal matters (elvi döntés). Besides these political instruments, some purely professional or apolitical ones also evolved under the radar of the politburo. These were the so-called college statements (kollégiumi állásfoglalás) or college opinions (kollégiumi vélemény).Footnote 89 These were the results of purely professional discussions between judges, which were published and had their existence officially acknowledged in the 1970s, but were never legally formalized: They were informal institutions of the judiciary.
On paper, both the political and the professional instruments of uniform interpretation have survived the transition to democracy, but the political ones are no longer applied—an atrophy.Footnote 90 The hasty parliamentary legislation left several lacunae open, explaining the need for uniform application and the survival of the informal tools.Footnote 91 The judicial reform of 1997 aimed also to root out the instruments inherited from the communist era and introduced one special binding form of interpretative judicial decision, the so-called Law Uniformity Decisions (jogegységi határozat). Although these should have replaced all informal or semi-formal opinions, guidelines, declarations, this did not happen, and Law Uniformity Decisions were simply added to the patchwork of other interpretative tools without eradicating them. Their coexistence continued after the judicial reform of 2011 as well, and after the 2019 attempt to eliminate informal judicial interpretative tools.Footnote 92
The uniform application of the law is part of legal socialization in Hungary. It is a very important driving force for the judiciary. Nonetheless, it has been gradually instrumentalized since 2010. This happened in three steps. First, access to the Kúria was reduced to deviations from judgments made after the establishment of the Kúria in 2012, which stressed conformity with the newly established regime.Footnote 93 Second, in a timely coincidence with the appointment of a new Chief Justice, a hybrid form of the stare decisis doctrine was introducedFootnote 94 in 2019. Decisions of the Kúria were declared binding on lower courts and a deviation from them requires explicit reasoning.Footnote 95 Third, they can be overturned by a special chamber responsible for law uniformity Footnote 96 chaired by the President or Vice President of the Kúria. Because there is no guidance on what a deviation is and how to compare cases, the admissibility criteria to this special chamber are rather arbitrary, and this special remedy serves to control or even micromanage the decision-making of the Kúria. All these circumstances foster conformity at the expense of other virtues of the judiciary.
2. Misuse of the Constitutional Complaint
The constitutional complaint introduced in 1989 proved to be ineffective because it was not available against judicial decisions, and hence the reform remedying that deficiency in 2012 was welcome. Footnote 97 Unfortunately, this was redesigned in favor of the governmental bodies as the Constitutional Court in 2018 declared a complaint by the National Bank against a judgment of the Kúria to be admissible.Footnote 98 Although this was simply contrary to the black letter of the law,Footnote 99 it enabled government bodies to seek a remedy against final decisions of the Kúria at the captured and hence politically more reliable Constitutional Court,Footnote 100 which quashed several decisions unfavorable to the government. Here again, the interplay between institutional design and personal appointments is hard to overlook. Apart from the correction of individual cases, this has a negative effect on the judiciary as a whole. Precisely, because the Constitutional Court usually corrects judgments unfavored by the government, the ordinary judges do not make those decisions at all.
V. Selection, Appointment, and Promotion of Judges
Hungary, as a country of the German legal tradition, follows the concept of Einheitsjurist,Footnote 101 requiring candidates for the judiciary to pass the same examination, which serves as a universal ticket to the legal profession on the bench or at the bar and enables holders to travel between different jobs. For a long time, this was a mainly theoretical possibility and the typical way to the bench was traineeship at a court.Footnote 102 External candidates appeared very rarely.Footnote 103
This was changed in the last decade, and a points-based system was established, opening up judicial careers and widening the requirement base. Although reform was necessary because, first, the earlier forms of selection and promotion were arcane and enabled favoritism; second, this in reality works much less well than one would expect; and third, it also contains loopholes and emergency brakes in order to assist the favored and to impede unfavored candidates.
1. The Dysfunctional Selection System Inherited from Communism
Judgeship was not a dream job for high flyers during the communist regime, but it offered a good work/life balance.Footnote 104 The creation of junior judicial positions leading to judgeships and selecting candidates for them depended very much on the discretion of regional court presidents and the Ministry of Justice. This cooperation lingered on after the transition and until 1997,Footnote 105 fostering informal networks and favoritism.Footnote 106 Although open and competitive appointment and promotion were required by the Act on Judges of 1997, the selection criteria were not set or standardized, and the whole procedure remained rather opaque.Footnote 107 As a reaction to criticisms from the EU,Footnote 108 a competitive examination was introduced,Footnote 109 but its outcome was not binding when appointments were being considered. This led to a dysfunctional selection process in which judicial corporativism and personal connections counted for more than skill and aptitude.Footnote 110
2. The Points-Based System—A Meritless Meritocracy?
The supranational criticism laid the groundwork for a new and more meritocratic selection mechanism:Footnote 111 The Hungarian points-based system takes into account professional experience, bar exams, scholarly and further professional qualifications—PhD., LLM or scholarly articles—and a command of languages, but still leaves some room for subjective criteria and endorsements. The outcome of the points-based assessment binds the Head of the NJO inasmuch as they must propose a candidate, who is one of the three best applicants, and if the best performing one is not nominated the decision needs to be justified, which sounds merit-based but deserves a closer look.
First, the system is known in advance and candidates know which qualifications count and how to obtain the points necessary for a judicial appointment by polishing their language skills or writing scholarly articles.Footnote 112 This is much more transparent than anything else that has been in operation since the Second World War.Footnote 113 Second, it nevertheless raises the question of the comparability of different types of experience: Time spent at the bar, in public administration, or in academia has become more and more interchangeable or even better evaluated than actual judicial work. This works in favor of external candidates and especially those from the public administration or the NJO,Footnote 114 where—at least so it appears—attitudes, capabilities, and loyalties could have been tested.Footnote 115 Moreover, public servants often have a bureaucratic mentality and are accustomed to an organizational culture fostering deference to government institutions and interests. Third, a PhD, an LLM, or a study trip in a foreign country can easily be a substitute for several years of actual judicial work. Although this encourages judges to broaden their horizons, it also begs the question how those time-consuming extrajudicial activities can be pursued; these scholarly endeavors require the support, permission, and flexibility of the court president as regards to their primary duties of judging. And precisely because this is a discretionary power, the court presidents can push their favorite candidates to obtain those valuable extra points and make headway or administratively block those in disfavor. Fourth, there are several activities within the judiciary like mentoring or participation in legislative activities or in the administration of the judiciary, which are rewarded by extra points, but selection for these activities is also in the hands of the court presidents. So, points may be merit-based, but not necessarily selection for judicial positions. Fifth, actual judicial work counts less overall than other factors, a fact which surely fosters some competitiveness, but also facilitates appointment of people without any previous judicial experience and socialization to the bench, begging the question of how they can acquire them later, how to handle eventual personal loyalties towards earlier employers—revolving doors—and, of course, how to maintain the attractiveness of judicial clerkships if external candidates are fast-tracked into them.
Sixth, personal endorsement still matters and can influence appointment or promotion. The evaluation of judicial work takes place according to quantitative—speed, keeping deadlines, number of finished cases, and so on—and qualitative—legal skills, conduct of trials, decision-making ability—criteria,Footnote 116 and are assessed by the judge’s immediate professional superiors, which is a considerable incentive to align himself with their viewpoint for a smoother career while hard-nosed ones have a bumpier ride.Footnote 117 The bureaucratic values of keeping deadlines and performance records also go a long way, although they are attributes of quantity rather than of quality.Footnote 118 In promotions, the opinion of a kollégium—judges adjudicating in the same branch of law—counts a lot, and senior judges—chamber presidents, college presidents, and their deputies—determine the patterns of voting by endorsing candidates. Therefore, secondments to appellate courts enable the selectors to become familiar with the candidates, select those who fit in, and endorse them later. The call for application remains a mere formality. Seventh, special criteria can always tilt the scales and tailor-make the requirements, as happened with a former deputy secretary of the Ministry of Justice, who was so “lucky” that being outspoken in his special field of expertise—right of assembly—was required at the Kúria for a judicial position after he left the Ministry.Footnote 119 All in all, the system is less merit-based than it is claimed to be. The role played by personal connections and networks is simply well hidden in the manner in which extra points can be earned.
3. Emergency Brakes and Loopholes
Although the points-based system can be tilted to some extent, it may still produce unwanted results which need to be dealt with. One option is for the whole call to be annulled by the Head of the NJO. This is brute force, makes a great noise,Footnote 120 and is of only limited use because it can only hinder an appointment but not be used to pick and choose the “right chap.” Nonetheless, it also demonstrates the possible far-reaching influence of the Head of the NJO.Footnote 121 An annulment or invalidation can, of course, serve legitimate aims if the position turns out to be superfluous—because of a shrinking caseload, for example. Therefore, it should happen only exceptionally; otherwise, it shows dysfunctionality or even abuse, especially if it happens even if suitable candidates apply, without proper explanation, or if a new call for the same position is announced after an annulment.Footnote 122 Because actions against an annulment are non-justiciable,Footnote 123 the Head of the NJO can unaccountably make and does make decisions, making it possible to fill strategically important positions and foster her own personal network. Since 2023, these decisions have had to be confirmed by the NJC.
Moreover, the whole merit-based selection mechanism can be circumvented by temporary presidential appointments made solely by the Head of the Judicial Office.Footnote 124 These temporarily appointed persons are later usually the only candidates for the permanent positions.Footnote 125 Some of them simply purchase the loyalty of the most influential judges at the court by targeted bonuses or better treatment. In other cases, the temporarily appointed presidents are not challenged by their colleagues, either because they learn to live with the status quo or the futility of the challenge is signaled clearly. If the results of an open call are annulled for several times if not the favored candidate wins, nobody dares to challenge the chosen one. Temporary appointments in themselves can serve a legitimate aim in the case of emergencies, but they can also obviously be abused in order to handpick loyalists. This possibility was again reduced in 2023 for unlocking EU money.
Nonetheless, it would also be an overstatement to say that only those who are loyal to the Head of the NJO or to the Government are appointed. This is demonstrated by the previously mentioned case of Gabriella Szabó who, as a former public servant, was appointed as an administrative judge, but her appointment was not made permanent following her request for a preliminary ruling. This can be interpreted in several ways: Her position as a rank-and-file judge was not important enough to test her loyalty, or she was able to fool the appointment procedure but, after that crucial error, she had to be fired regardless of her other skills.
One of the larger loopholes in the merit-based selection system was the possibility of parachuting judges from the Constitutional Court to the Kúria at their request after their tenure at the Constitutional Court had ended. Taking into account that judges are appointed to the Constitutional Court in a highly politicized procedure and several of them have not sat for the bar exam, their appointment to the Kúria was an obvious attempt to capture that court. In order to unlock some EU funds, the rule was amended cosmetically, and the former constitutional justices can only be appointed to the Higher Appeal Courts (Ítélőtábla).
D. Is the Cat Dead or Alive?
As with the famous cat, the answer relies on what happens when you open the box. According to the prevailing governmental narrative, everything is stricto sensu legal on paper, which should suggest a live cat. Legalism is, of course, a powerful weapon in a country with a strong formalist/positivist legal tradition, where the overwhelming majority of textbooks are of a descriptive nature and scholarship has not paid much attention to practices, usages, or conventions because of their lack of normative value.Footnote 126
What is more, the abused legal provisions are also not absurd, and most of them have a rational core, making them harder to challenge: Sickness or an unmanageable caseload are reasonable grounds for case reallocation; administrative duties may justify temporary appointments; and special expertise may be required at a particular court. Formality serves purely to disguise informality and true intentions. Whether that causes the cat to be alive is hard to answer.
Drilling deeper, however, one can barely escape the impression that the formal rules were enacted not to strengthen institutions but to capture strategically important positions, such as those of presidents of the regional courts and the Supreme Court or of members of the Constitutional Court. In these cases, personal changes coincide with the ebb and flow of power: The friendlier the relations, the wider are the powers—the powers of the Constitutional Court and those of the President of the Supreme Court have changed a lot during the last decade. The formal rules follow changes in the informal structure and the web of personal connections. Rules were enacted precisely because it was clear that a close friend, a loyal ally, or a trusted longtime colleague would be appointed to the key positions. These people understand perfectly what is expected from them and need no instructions. Moreover, the lack of internal and external accountability mechanisms strengthens the key actors’ positions and paves the way for abusing their discretionary powers. This makes the cat mortally ill. This illness became apparent to the EU, as well, and required several changes to the judiciary in order to cure the poor cat. It is not yet clear, however, how effective the medicine is.
On the one hand, the tailor-made extraordinary remedies and control mechanisms show that the government deeply distrusts the judiciary and fears that judicial decisions may turn out to be unfavorable to it, and, therefore, it needs to appoint some guardians of its interests. This, on the other hand, also means that the judiciary as a whole is in rather decent shape, which again gives the impression of a fairly alive cat. Nonetheless, the questionable selection and appointment mechanisms may also result in the poor cat taking a long time to die.
It is also clear that the judiciary has not developed strong immunity to encroachments into its independence. Many questionable practices and techniques—case allocation, judicial appointments, law uniformity decisions, and so on—can be traced back to the communist regime and have survived even the democratic transition, suggesting that very few democratic values actually penetrated deep into the behavioral patterns of the judiciary after transition.Footnote 127 The missing conventional standards of democratic normality in combination with learned helplessness, a bureaucratic mentality, and a lack of solidarity among judges lowered their resistance to abusive techniques. This again leads to the unpleasant question of how healthy the cat was at all before we put it into that box.
Acknowledgments
The author thanks all participants of the Informal Judicial Institutions and Democratic Decay workshop which took place on 20-22 October 2022 in Prague and András Jakab for comments on an earlier draft.
Competing Interests
The author declares none.
Funding Statement
The research leading to this article has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (INFINITY, grant no. 101002660).