Several thousand Hungarians protested against Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s government on Wednesday in the second day of anti-government rallies after lawmakers fast-tracked legislation sharply raising taxes for small firms.
An hours-long blockade of a bridge in Budapest on Tuesday failed to derail the approval of a motion by nationalist Orban’s government to increase the tax rate for hundreds of thousands of small businesses.
Wednesday’s rally again gathered outside par-liament before protesters chanting “We’ve had enough!” marched across central Budapest, tempo-rarily blocking main traffic junctions and another bridge over the River Danube.
Zsolt Turi, one of the protesters at the rally, said his income would fall sharply under the revised tax scheme, set to take effect in September, which he called an unacceptable prospect.
“I will go into the black market … paying the minimal social security, or I will grab my suitcase and leave for the nearest normal country,” he said. Re-elected in April, Orban is facing his toughest challenge since taking power in a 2010 landslide, with inflation at a two-decade high, the forint at record lows and European Union funds in limbo amid a dispute over democratic standards.
A tightening of gas supplies to Europe and soar-ing fuel costs since Russia’s invasion of neighbour-ing Ukraine in February have added to pressure on Orban, whose right-wing Fidesz is still by far the most popular party in Hungary.
On Wednesday his government ordered an ex-port ban on fuels like gas and scrapped a years-long cap on utility prices for higher-usage households, rolling back one of the 59-year-old prime minister’s signature economic policies.—Reuters