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2 populist European leaders openly hope for a Trump election victory

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European leaders rarely weigh in on U.S. elections before they’ve taken place, but Hungary’s far-right Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has ignored those conventions.

“If Mr. Trump returns, we will open multiple bottles of champagne,” Orbán said during a news conference before addressing the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, on Oct. 10. He also expressed confidence that former President Donald Trump, if reelected, would resolve the Ukraine war before he even takes office — something Trump himself has vowed to do

Orbán and Trump have a friendly relationship. The Hungarian leader endorsed Trump and visited him at Mar-a-Lago in July after attending a NATO summit in Washington. Trump often speaks warmly of Orbán at political rallies and in media interviews. 

When Vice President Kamala Harris said during her debate with Trump that world leaders were “laughing” at the former president and calling him “a disgrace,” Trump defended himself by pointing to Orbán’s assessment of him.

“He said the most respected, most feared person is Donald Trump,” the former president said, calling Orbán “a tough person, smart.”

“Increasingly concerned”

That positive assessment of Orbán isn’t shared by many other U.S. politicians. Several Senate Republicans have traveled to Hungary to meet with civil society representatives and come away worried about Russia’s growing influence in Hungary.

“Our delegation and many of our congressional colleagues are increasingly concerned by Hungary’s deepening and expanding relationship with Russia and the continued erosion of its democratic institutions,” said Republican Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas, who led a delegation to Hungary earlier this month. “It is in our shared interest for our countries to work closely together. We urge Hungary to listen to the concerns of its allies and to act on them.”

Orbán has been in power for 14 years, and he served a previous term as Hungary’s leader before that. He has fostered much closer relations with Russia than any of his European Union counterparts. He’s drawn sharp criticism from the bloc for imposing tight restrictions on immigration and LGBTQ+ rights, and for limiting press freedom and the independence of Hungary’s courts. The EU has accused his government of violating the union’s standards on the rule of law and democracy.

Orbán’s government has been at odds with Washington over Russian assets frozen by the U.S. and European governments after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

The U.S. and Europe would like to use some of those seized Russian assets to fund loans to Ukraine, but Orbán’s government wants to hold off on any decision about that until after the U.S. presidential election.

“We believe that this issue should be decided — the prolongation of the Russian sanctions — after the U.S. elections,” Hungarian Finance Minister Mihály Varga said. “We have to see in which direction the future U.S. administration is going on this issue.”

It’s not clear what a second Trump administration would mean for the future of the sanctions against Russia, but the former president speaks admiringly of Russian President Vladimir Putin, and he’s repeatedly refused to say whether he wants Ukraine to prevail in the war started by Moscow.

President Donald Trump shakes hands with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán outside the West Wing of the White House on Monday, May 13, 2019.
President Donald Trump shakes hands with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán outside the West Wing of the White House on Monday, May 13, 2019.

Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images


In a new book, journalist Bob Woodward claims Trump has spoken with Putin as many as seven times since he left office. A Kremlin spokesperson denied such calls took place.

Orbán has suggested that he has a sense of Trump’ plans for Ukraine. In an interview with a Hungarian outlet, he discussed how Trump intended to end the war. Trump, he said, “won’t give a penny” to Ukraine and the war will end because Ukraine “cannot stand on its own two feet.” 

“If the Americans don’t give money and weapons and the Europeans don’t give them, then this war is over,” Orbán said. “If the Americans don’t provide money, the Europeans will be unable to finance this war on their own, and then the war will be over.”

The U.S. has provided more than $174 billion in military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine since the war began.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said Monday that if Trump is not reelected, Europe “will have to prepare for a very difficult period.”

“We think that Trump’s victory can bring about a change in international political life that will bring with it a greater hope for peace than ever before,” Szijjártó said.

Orbán has described Trump as a “maverick” and a “refreshing” character among world leaders.

“I like mavericks and he’s like that,” Orbán said in March. “One of the most boring elements of my profession, that the leaders are getting more and more boring. So, we need refreshing new guys.”

“A dangerous proposition”

U.S. Ambassador to Hungary David Pressman criticized Orbán’s open preference for Trump.

“Prime Minister Orbán, who on the one hand baselessly claims the United States government is trying to overthrow his government, publicly calls for the political defeat of the president of the United States and actively participates in U.S. partisan political events,” Pressman said at an event in March commemorating the 25th anniversary of Hungary’s accession into NATO. “Hungary advocates for electoral candidates around the world from Poland to Brazil, all while decrying foreign interference here at home.”

In July, Pressman said Orbán reminded him “daily of who he would like to win that election, who he would vote for if he were an American.”

“We have no other ally or partner — not a single one — that similarly, overtly and tirelessly, campaigns for a specific candidate in an election in the United States of America,” Pressman said of Orban, suggesting the Hungarian leader was “seemingly convinced that, no matter what, it only helps Hungary — or at least helps him personally.”

He warned that “partisanizing a bilateral relationship is a dangerous proposition,” and does not serve the best interests of the Hungarian people.

“The current government of Hungary may see its relationship with the United States as a ‘political’ issue but, I assure you, the United States of America does not,” the ambassador said.

Orbán’s role on the world stage has expanded in recent years. When Finland and Sweden sought NATO membership, Hungary and Turkey objected. Hungary was the last NATO member to approve Sweden’s accession to the alliance.  

In July, when Hungary assumed the six-month rotational presidency of the EU’s governing body, the European Commission, Orbán adopted the slogan, “Make Europe Great Again.” Though the role is largely symbolic, he traveled on what he called “peace missions” to Kyiv, Moscow, China, Washington and Florida.

The trip to Moscow angered EU and NATO leaders, and Jens Stoltenberg, then the secretary general of the transatlantic defense alliance, said Orbán’s visit did not represent the bloc or its Ukraine policies.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán deliver a joint press statement following their talks at the Kremlin in Moscow on July 5, 2024.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán deliver a joint press statement following their talks at the Kremlin in Moscow on July 5, 2024.

ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP via Getty Images


Orbán has also adopted a tactic used by some GOP border-state governors in the U.S., busing migrants from Hungary to Brussels. The EU ordered Hungary to pay a 200 million euro fine (roughly $217 million) for breaching the bloc’s asylum protocols, but Budapest ignored it. The EU has since withheld funding from Hungary.

Hungary’s strict enforcement of immigration laws has seemingly discouraged migration. There were only 31 asylum claims registered in the country in 2023, according to EU figures.

“If Brussels continues to insist on its decision to punish us for defending the borders of the EU, they can get what they want,” Orbán wrote on X. “We will transport the illegal migrants who are banging on Hungary’s door to the main square in Brussels.”

Elon Musk, who has donated tens of millions of dollars to Trump’s reelection efforts and is also an outspoken critic of illegal migration, replied, “Good idea” on X, which he owns.

Slovakia

Russia’s sphere of influence reaches beyond Hungary.

Slovakia also opposes NATO’s policies toward Ukraine. Under nationalist Prime Minister Robert Fico, who returned to power last fall, Slovakia has halted military aid to Ukraine and proposed lifting EU sanctions on Russia.

Fico has not directly commented on the looming U.S. election, and is not as outspoken as Orbán when it comes to American politics. But he has made his preference for Trump clear. After the attempt on Trump’s life in July, Fico, who survived his own an assassination attempt in May, rushed to blame Trump’s political opponents, saying they tried to “shut him down.”

“And when they don’t succeed, they annoy the public so much that some poor guy takes a gun,” Fico said in a social media post.

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico attends a press conference at the town hall in in Wroclaw, Poland, on Sept. 19, 2024.
Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico attends a press conference at the town hall in in Wroclaw, Poland, on Sept. 19, 2024.

Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images


Like Orbán, Fico has predicted that Trump would end the war in Ukraine before taking office if he’s reelected.

“I believe this because the USA has total influence in Ukraine,” he said.

Fico, who heads the populist and nationalist Smer Party, wants to reestablish ties with Russia. After Orbán left Moscow in July, Fico told a Slovak outlet that he would have gladly joined Orbán, were it not for his wounds from the assassination attempt.

His defense minister filed a complaint against Fico’s predecessor for donating Slovakia’s aging MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine without parliamentary approval.

Russian influence efforts in Slovakia should be a warning to the U.S., Democratic Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia said in a hearing in May. Warner, who chairs the Select Intelligence Committee, said the Slovak government was becoming pro-Kremlin. He noted that in 2022, over 75% of the population supported Ukraine, but said months of Russian efforts had reversed public opinion and managed to convince most Slovaks that the U.S. caused the war.

“A wide range of media, open source research, and other sources have similarly pointed to Russian election influence campaigns in Slovakian elections,” Warner said.

Energy is one of the motivating factors behind Hungary and Slovakia’s desire for a quick end to the Ukraine-Russia war. Both countries have long relied on inexpensive Russian oil and gas, which is transported through Ukraine. Ukraine’s agreement to allow the fuel transport expires at the end of the year, and Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal told Fico that Kyiv would not extend or renew the agreement.

Russia provided 80% of Hungary’s oil and gas and 100% of its nuclear energy in 2022, according to the International Trade Commission. Two-thirds of the natural gas used in Slovakia came from Russia in 2023, the Germany-based Friedrich Ebert Foundation reported.

After the agreement with Ukraine expires, Hungary will import Russian energy via a pipeline that runs through Turkey.

Hungary and Slovakia have led a lonely effort to pursue Moscow-friendly policies as members of the EU and NATO.

Trump in February threatened NATO members that fail to spend 2% of their national GDP on defense. 

“No, I would not protect you,” Mr. Trump said. “In fact, I would encourage [Russia] to do whatever they want.”

Both Hungary and Slovakia have reached the 2% defense expenditure threshold, according to NATO data released in June. Eight other nations still fall short.



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Fed expected to make another cut in final interest rate decision of 2024

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Fed expected to make another cut in final interest rate decision of 2024 – CBS News


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The Federal Reserve on Wednesday will make its final interest rate decision of 2024 with a 0.25 percentage point cut expected. CBS News MoneyWatch correspondent Kelly O’Grady has more.

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CIA director reportedly heading to Qatar for Gaza ceasefire and hostage release talks

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CIA director reportedly heading to Qatar for Gaza ceasefire and hostage release talks – CBS News


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CIA Director William Burns is reportedly expected to be in Qatar Wednesday for talks to try to secure a Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal. CBS News foreign correspondent Chris Livesay has more.

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Complete mastodon jaw unearthed in New York after homeowner spots teeth in backyard

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A complete mastodon jaw was discovered in the backyard of a home in New York’s Hudson Valley, marking the state’s first such find in more than a decade, officials announced this week.

The Stockton, New York, homeowner initially spotted two teeth hidden in the fronds of a plant on their property and proceeded to uncover two more teeth buried inches underground, the New York State Museum said. Staff from the museum, which is based in Albany and has an archaeological research department, and SUNY Orange launched an investigation at the property. 

mastodonteeth02.jpg
A complete mastodon jaw was unearthed from the yard of a home in New York state.

New York State Museum


Their excavation unearthed additional fossils, including a full, well-preserved adult jaw and fragments of rib and toe bones that once belonged to a mastodon — ancient giants that existed during the Ice Age and became extinct some 10,000 years ago. The term refers to a group of massive elephant-like species, like the mammoth. 

“When I found the teeth and examined them in my hands, I knew they were something special and decided to call in the experts,” said the homeowner in a statement to the New York State Museum. “I’m thrilled that our property has yielded such an important find for the scientific community.”

mastodonteeth01.jpg
Excavators discovered fragments of the mastodon’s toe and rib bones in addition to the jaw.

New York State Museum


Remnants of mastodons have been discovered in New York before. According to the museum, more than 150 fossils of these prehistoric creatures have been documented to date statewide, with around one-third of them coming from Orange County, where the latest bones were found. 

But experts said the findings offer an opportunity to learn something new.

“This discovery is a testament to the rich paleontological history of New York and the ongoing efforts to understand its past,” said Robert Feranec, a research director and curator at the New York State Museum whose work centers on ice age animals, in a statement. “Fossils are resources that provide remarkable snapshots of the past, allowing us to not only reconstruct ancient ecosystems but also provide us with better context and understanding of the current world around us.”

The mastodon fossils will undergo carbon dating and analysis to determine the creature’s age, diet and habitat while it was alive, the museum said. After that analysis and subsequent preservation work are complete, the bones will be featured on public display in 2025.



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