Roiled by scandal, Hungary names new president

Roiled by scandal, Hungary names new president
FILE - In this Thursday, April 1, 2021 file photo, Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban, speaks during a joint press conference in Budapest, Hungary. Fidesz, the ruling party of Prime Minister Viktor Orban, tabled amendments in Parliament on Thursday, June 12 to new legislation that bans showing to people under 18 pornographic materials or any content encouraging gender change or homosexuality. The party describes the new legislation as part of an effort to protect children from pedophilia. But LGBT rights activists denounced the bills as discriminatory, with some comparing it to a 2013 Russian law banning so-called gay “propaganda.” (AP Photo/Laszlo Balogh, file)
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Hungary’s ruling party nominated little-known judge Tamás Sulyok as the country’s new president Thursday, seeking to quiet a political crisis that saw the resignation of the previous head of state.

Hungarian President Katalin Novák, a close ally of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, resigned earlier this month after revelations that she had pardoned a man convicted of helping cover up child sexual abuse, with the scandal triggering protests in Budapest. Novák’s resignation is yet to be formally accepted in a vote by parliament, but this will likely happen on February 26, when the legislature reconvenes.

Hungary’s ruling Fidesz party nominated Sulyok, the president of the Constitutional Court of Hungary, as its chosen replacement for Novák.

“[Sulyok] is best poised to embody the unity of the nation,” Fidesz parliamentary group leader Máté Kocsis said in televised remarks on Thursday.

The 67-year-old Sulyok, who keeps a low profile, was appointed president of the Constitutional Court of Hungary by the Fidesz-led parliament in 2016. He also served as honorary consul of Austria from 2000 until 2014, before becoming a member of the Constitutional Court.

“I have never been interested in politics in my life,” he told local media in 2021.

Sulyok still has to be formally endorsed by Hungary’s parliament, but this is largely a formality, with Fidesz holding a supermajority.