Tens of thousands of Hungarians demonstrate against Orban’s school policies

Among other things, the demonstrators demanded higher wages for teachers and ideology-free curricula.

Among other things, demonstrators in Budapest are demanding higher wages for teachers.

Szilard Koszticsak v EPA

(dpa) Tens of thousands of Hungarians demonstrated in Budapest on Sunday against the school policies of the government of right-wing populist Viktor Orban. Among other things, they demanded better pay for teachers, ideology-free curricula and the right to strike for teachers. According to the teachers’ union, there have been 147 teacher protests in 61 towns across the country in the past few weeks.

According to Orban, he wants to put society and culture in Hungary on a new “Christian and national basis”. Sunday’s protest was also directed against the government’s control of state media and much of the private media, as well as against Orban’s good relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Usually October 23rd is celebrated with big government rallies in Budapest, with a celebratory speech by the head of government. This time this did not happen. Instead, Orban attended a celebration commemorating the start of the anti-Stalinist uprising of 1956 in Zalaegerszeg, western Hungary – tightly shielded and in front of invited guests.

He complained that in 1956 the West had let Hungary down in the fight against the Stalinists. “We’ll hold out when it’s necessary and fight back when we can,” he said. “Let us not concern ourselves with those who shoot at Hungary from the shadows or from the heights of Brussels.”

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