Hungary: Black screen heralds start of public media overhaul
The disinformation that public service media in Hungary broadcast during the 16ย years of Viktor Orban 's rule was one of a kind in the EU . No other public service media in the EU published lies, hat
The disinformation that public service media in Hungary broadcast during the 16ย years of Viktor Orban 's rule was one of a kind in the EU . No other
Read Full Story at DW World โWhy This Matters
The abrupt blackout of Hungaryโs public media signals more than a technical glitchโit marks the dismantling of one of Europeโs most potent instruments of state propaganda. For a decade and a half, Fidesz-aligned outlets have blurred the line between journalism and political messaging, normalizing disinformation within national institutions. This isnโt just a domestic power grab; itโs a test case for how far illiberal governance can reshape democratic norms when control extends to the airwaves.
Background Context
Hungaryโs public broadcasters have operated as de facto government mouthpieces since Viktor Orbรกnโs 2010 supermajority enabled constitutional reforms stripping editorial independence. State news outlets routinely amplified Kremlin-aligned narrativesโfrom COVID-19 conspiracies to Ukraine war disinformationโwhile suppressing dissent. The recent black screen, though framed as a technical failure, follows a pattern: sudden disruptions during critical junctures, such as elections or EU summits, often precede personnel purges or structural overhauls.
What Happens Next
Expect a rapid replacement of leadership with loyalists, mirroring past overhauls of the Constitutional Court or data protection agencies. The EUโs tepid response to earlier breaches of media freedom rules suggests Hungary may face no more than procedural rebukes. Meanwhile, independent outlets already face advertising boycotts and legal harassment, leaving public media as the final domino to fall in Orbรกnโs media monopoly.
Bigger Picture
Hungaryโs public media overhaul is the apex of a broader authoritarian playbook: weaponizing state institutions to suffocate pluralism, then invoking "reform" to justify their capture. From Polandโs courts to Sloveniaโs courts, illiberal leaders increasingly target legacy media as a prerequisite for unchecked power. The EUโs failure to enforce its own rules has emboldened this trend, turning Hungaryโs black screen into a warning for democracies on the continent.

