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SPÖ Member of Parliament Lindner Travels to Forbidden Budapest Pride

Mario Lindner will zu der verbotenen Budapest Pride reisen.
Mario Lindner will zu der verbotenen Budapest Pride reisen. ©APA/ROLAND SCHLAGER (Symbolbild)
At the end of June, the organizers of the Budapest Pride Parade, suppressed by the Hungarian government, can expect political support from Austria.

National Council members Mario Lindner (SPÖ) and David Stögmüller (Greens) publicly announced their participation in the event on Tuesday. Lindner emphasized that he is organizing a solidarity trip to Budapest Pride on June 28, "which will take place despite Orban's bans."

Later, Stögmüller also emphasized that he, along with colleagues, will "send a clear and indispensable signal of solidarity with the Hungarian LGBTIQ community" on site. The two members of parliament are part of the steering group of the LGBTIQ Intergroup in the Austrian Parliament, which was newly constituted last week. All parliamentary parties are represented in it, except for the FPÖ, which supports the Hungarian government's actions against the LGBTIQ+ community.

The right-conservative government of the EU member state is trying to suppress the traditional event of the LGBTIQ+ community under the pretext of child protection. After the assembly law was already amended last month, this was reinforced yesterday, Monday, with a constitutional amendment. This also includes the stipulation that there are only two genders in Hungary - male and female.

Lindner plans to travel to banned Budapest Pride

Lindner criticized the constitutional amendment as a "new low point in the international cultural struggle against diverse, open democracies." The human rights-hostile constitutional amendments on the backs of LGBTIQ+ people "are intended to distract from the economic failure of Orban's autocratic course and are a terrible expression of the sheer panic of the Hungarian wannabe-Trump in the face of declining approval ratings and an increasingly popular opposition," commented the SPÖ's spokesperson for equality and LGBTIQ+ issues.

Stögmüller expressed a similar sentiment, criticizing the "inhumane criticism on the backs of queer people" by Hungarian Prime Minister Orbán. Orbán "impressively shows that he does not care about human rights. We must not remain silent here. Now, above all, international support is needed for all those who show courage in Hungary and defend their rights."

Lindner and Stögmüller also sharply criticized the FPÖ, whose General Secretary Christian Hafenecker had welcomed the anti-queer measures of the Orbán government. "Anyone who says something like this openly questions the human rights of minorities. The FPÖ once again shows that it stands against democracy and clearly on the side of authoritarian forces," stated the Green politician. His SPÖ colleague also sees evidence that "Kickl and his cronies (...) want to advance the Orbanization of Austria." "Apart from culture wars and Orban fangirling, the FPÖ has nothing to offer," said Lindner.

Hafenecker: "Step that would also benefit Austria"

FPÖ General Secretary Christian Hafenecker welcomed the Hungarian constitutional amendment on Monday. "If the SPÖ and the Greens are already fuming with rage over the enshrinement of the self-evident existence of only two biological sexes - male and female - in a constitution, as well as the enhancement of child protection against ideology-laden early sexualization, then this shows only one thing: They have no problem with any policy, but simply with normality, which in their words is apparently 'hostile to human rights' and 'inhumane'!" he said in a statement on Tuesday.

Furthermore, this "woke cascade of hate and insults" from the Reds and Greens would once again underscore why a step towards restoring social normality and protecting our children from re-education attempts by "leftist gender and rainbow ideologues" would also benefit Austria, added Hafenecker: "People are fed up with a small, loud minority constantly trying to convince them against all reason that there are countless genders, that they can be freely and daily changed, and that our children should be re-educated in this sense." On the subject of genders, he referred to statistical data showing that in January "only 74 people" in Austria identified their gender as diverse, intersex, or open.

(APA/Red)

This article has been automatically translated, read the original article here.

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