Home News LGBTQ issues in school are targeted by lawmakers, this time in Hungary

LGBTQ issues in school are targeted by lawmakers, this time in Hungary

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The Hungarian government has been waging a relentless campaign against what it calls “LGBT” ideology in the run-up to parliamentary elections this weekend. The April 3 vote coincides with a referendum nominally around school education on LGBTQ issues.

Critics see the plebiscite as an effort to lock in the so-called Child Protection Act. Passed in June 2021, the legislation stiffened penalties for pedophilia but also sneaked in last-minute amendments banning the promotion or portrayal of LGBTQ themes in education and media to minors.

Why We Wrote This

Just as Florida enacts a controversial law over teaching LGBTQ issues in the classroom, Hungary votes in a referendum that also threatens to undermine societal tolerance in exchange for political gain.

Hungary’s right-wing government argues that sex education, including discussions on sexual orientation, is a parental responsibility. Those views paved the way for the act, which activists say conflates pedophilia with membership in the LGBTQ community.

In echoes of the conservative rhetoric around Florida’s own Parental Rights in Education law, which critics have dubbed the “Don’t Say Gay” law, TV ads in Hungary suggest that young children are being taught about sex reassignment surgery over math at school.

“If a child asks a teacher about anything related to homosexuality or his or her gender issues, it is forbidden to answer,” says Anna Komjáthy, president of the Democratic Union of Teachers. “This is the big problem.”

Budapest, Hungary

When it came time to send their twin boys to school, Szilárd Szabó and his husband opted for a private American educational institution rather than a public Hungarian one.

The choice was as much about giving their sons a strong, cosmopolitan education as it was about their family’s “two dad” dynamics.

“We wanted to have an environment where people are more open, where teachers are more open, and being gay is not a big issue,” shares Mr. Szabó, sipping espresso in a modern sunlit office near the Danube River. “We chose the bubble, the friendly and positive environment.”

Why We Wrote This

Just as Florida enacts a controversial law over teaching LGBTQ issues in the classroom, Hungary votes in a referendum that also threatens to undermine societal tolerance in exchange for political gain.

Such an environment is becoming harder to find these days. Since 2020, the Hungarian Constitution stipulates that the “foundation of the family” is heterosexual marriage and bans the adoption of children by same-sex couples. And the government has been waging a relentless campaign against what it calls “LGBT” ideology in the run-up to parliamentary elections this weekend.

The April 3 vote coincides with a referendum nominally around school education on LGBTQ issues. Critics see the plebiscite as an effort to lock in bigoted legislation.

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