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EU Court Says Hungary’s Anti-LGBTQ Rules Breach Law

BRUSSELS, April 21 (Reuters) – Hungary’s ⁠outgoing ⁠government violated European ⁠law with rules prohibiting or ​restricting access to LGBTQ content, which stigmatise and ‌marginalise gay and trans ‌people, the European Court of ⁠Justice ⁠ruled on Tuesday.

The ruling could provide a test ​for the future of social policy under Hungary’s new leader Peter Magyar, who ended ​Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s 16-year rule in ⁠a landslide ⁠victory in an ⁠April ​12 election.

LGBTQ rights were eroded under Orban, who ​last year ⁠oversaw a ban on Pride marches and let police use facial recognition cameras to identify who attended. Magyar, a ⁠former official in Orban’s right-wing Fidesz party, campaigned ⁠on support for equality but has avoided taking a clear stance on LGBTQ rights.

The European court said Hungary had acted in breach of Article 2 of the EU’s Treaty, which sets out the fundamental values of the ⁠27-member bloc. It also found the Hungarian legislation breached the freedom to provide and receive services, as well as ​data protection laws.

(Reporting by Suban ​AbdullaEditing by Peter Graff)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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