Because of LGBT discrimination: EU starts proceedings against Hungary and Poland


Because of LGBT discrimination
EU starts proceedings against Hungary and Poland

The new law against the representation of non-heterosexual people in Hungary attracts a lot of attention in the context of the EM. Now it also has legal consequences. The EU Commission is initiating proceedings against Hungary and Poland for discrimination against LGBT people.

The EU Commission is taking legal action against Hungary and Poland because of the alleged discrimination against non-heterosexual people. The authority announced that equality and respect for dignity and human rights are fundamental values ​​of the EU. The Commission will therefore use all the instruments at its disposal to defend these values. For this purpose, so-called infringement proceedings have now been initiated. They could lead to actions before the Court of Justice of the European Union.

In the case of Hungary, it is specifically about the new law that bans publications that are accessible to children and that depict non-heterosexual relationships. It also bans advertising in which homosexuals or transsexuals appear as part of normalcy.

Many EU states and the Commission see it as discriminatory for this reason. Hungary, however, rejects the allegations against the law. From the government’s point of view, it only ensures that parents alone can decide how they want to organize the sexual upbringing of their children.

In the case of Poland, the Commission believes that the Polish authorities did not respond adequately to their investigation into so-called LGBT-free zones. These were created by several Polish regions and municipalities. The abbreviation LGBT stands for lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and other non-heterosexual people or people who do not identify with the traditional role model of men and women or other social norms relating to gender and sexuality. The Commission assumes that the LGBT-free zones are discriminatory and that Poland may be violating EU law.

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