Hungary's
Referendum on Dual Citizenship:
A Small Victory for Europeanism
By Dr. Michael A. Weinstein
As the European Union consolidates its expansion
into Eastern Europe, its Western European core is forced
to confront the consequences of its past as a competitive
nation-state system.
The modern European state system was grafted onto Eastern
Europe at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of
the twentieth centuries with the collapse of the Ottoman
Empire and the defeat of the Austro-Hungarian Empire
in World War I. Crafted from the dual and conflicting
motives of maximizing national self-determination and
punishing the vanquished, the new states were plagued
by the presence of ethnic minorities with irredentist
and often revanchist aims. Often systematically disadvantaged
by the majorities in the new states, the minorities
had all the more reason to hold themselves hostile and
apart.
Grievances persisted and frequently deepened during
the four decades of Communist rule after World War II.
With the fall of the Soviet bloc, Eastern European states
continued to face the issues posed by aggrieved minorities,
but now in an environment in which the minorities could
be more open, forthright and assertive in pursuing aspirations
for separation, union with their ethnic homelands or
autonomy. Except in the former Yugoslavia, the minorities
question has not been answered by military force. That
eventuality has been prevented elsewhere by the overriding
vital interest of all the Eastern European states in
integrating into the E.U., which requires that members
do not systematically discriminate against or exploit
minorities. Nonetheless, the legacy of the past still
poses some obstacles to the creation of a post-industrial
and harmonious multi-national Europe united by market
democracy and a Western lifestyle.
The persistence of the minorities problem in Eastern
Europe is illustrated by the referendum that was held
in Hungary on December 5 on whether to grant dual citizenship
to ethnic Hungarians living outside their homeland.
Of all the successor states to the Austro-Hungarian
Empire, Hungary suffered the most in the redrawing of
boundaries, losing two-thirds of its territory and 60
percent of its population to Romania, Czechoslovakia
and Yugoslavia in the 1920 Treaty of Trianon. Today,
2.5 million ethnic Hungarians live in neighboring states,
1.4 million of them in Romania, 560,000 in Slovakia,
300,000 in Serbia and 150,000 in Ukraine. Especially
in Romania, Serbia and Ukraine, which are not E.U. members
as Slovakia and Hungary are, ethnic Hungarians suffer
prejudice and disadvantages, and are less prosperous
than their kin in Hungary.
Ever since the World War I settlement, Hungarian nationalism
inside and outside the homeland has had as its foundation
the recovery of the full Hungarian nation, either through
the territorial restoration of "Greater Hungary,"
by force if necessary, or by securing political and
cultural autonomy for ethnic Hungarians in neighboring
states. Given the constraints imposed by the E.U., the
option of Greater Hungary is off the table. The project
of a "nation above borders" remains alive
and actuated the referendum.
The Referendum: Nationalism Versus Europeanism
The referendum was not initiated within the Hungarian
political system, but by the World Federation of Hungarians,
an N.G.O. dedicated to the protection of the Hungarian
diaspora and the nation-above-borders idea. The Federation
was able to obtain the signatures of the 200,000 voters
in Hungary necessary for putting its proposal on the
ballot. The proposal required the Hungarian parliament
to pass a law "offering preferential naturalization
-- on request -- that grants Hungarian citizenship to
persons who claim Hungarian ethnicity, do not reside
in Hungary, are not Hungarian citizens, and certify
Hungarian ethnicity."
The ethnic Hungarian populations in Hungary's neighboring
states -- who could not vote in the referendum -- were
in favor of the proposal, as were the organizations
that represent them. The advantages of citizenship for
the members of those populations go beyond satisfying
nationalist sentiment. They would become citizens of
the E.U. and with it have enhanced economic prospects,
gain a sense of security in their "host" states
and a presumptive protector of their interests in Budapest,
and be able to migrate freely to Hungary.
The climate of opinion and balance of interests was
different inside Hungary. There, the only advantage
seemed to be the satisfaction of nationalist sentiment
-- "healing the trauma of Trianon." Working
against the proposal was the opposition to dual citizenship
of Hungary's neighboring states -- especially Romania
-- and a possible influx of ethnic Hungarians into the
homeland that would make for costly burdens on Hungary's
social services and safety net. It is not surprising
that Hungarian Socialist Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany
opposed the naturalization proposition, urging people
not to vote, since, in order to pass, the proposal needed
a majority that included 25 percent of registered voters.
When the center-right Civic Union had held the reins
of government, it had deflected similar initiatives,
as any but an ultra-nationalist administration would
be expected to do.
In the campaign preceding the poll, the issue became
divisively politicized when the Civic Union, led by
Viktor Orban, placed itself on the side of the proposal.
Analysts saw this as a political move to exploit nationalism
and create embarrassment for the ruling party. Orban
ratcheted up his rhetoric, stating that the referendum
would determine "for our descendants...what kind
of Hungarians we were."
Gyurcsany retaliated against nationalism with Europeanism,
accusing Orban of fomenting "nationalist populism"
and offering in its place a vision of Hungary as an
"island of modernism" that needed to abandon
the past and proceed toward a future of full integration
into the European community. He also estimated that
800,000 ethnic Hungarians might migrate to Hungary if
the proposition passed, leading to an additional $2.9
billion in welfare expenditures each year that would
preclude upgrading the country's health services.
The pro-naturalization camp inside and outside Hungary
accused Gyurcsany of betrayal and exaggeration, revealing
the atmosphere of partisanship, fractiousness and polarization
that has characterized the closely divided Hungarian
political forces.
The dual-citizenship proposal failed at the polls;
with only 38 percent of voters turning out, the 51 percent
of them voting in favor of the question was not sufficient
to satisfy the requirement of approval by 25 percent
of registered voters. Gyurcsany's strategy had carried
the day, and analysts agreed that the public had responded
to the Prime Minister's pocketbook appeals and had been
left cold by Orban's call to unite all 15 million Hungarians,
of which 10 million live in the Hungarian state.
After the vote, Orban remained unreconciled and called
on Gyurcsany to convene a forum representing all Hungarians
to work out a plan for dual citizenship. The issue,
while resolved for the moment in favor of Europeanism,
is likely to flare up in the future, especially if Hungary's
economic growth lags and a more nationalist administration
is voted into office.
International Complications
The prospect of dual citizenship for ethnic Hungarians,
especially when Orban linked the issue to greater autonomy
for them in neighboring states, was greeted with disapproval
by those states. Romania, in particular, contains the
Transylvania region, which Hungarians regard as a historical
seat of their nation, and has the largest Hungarian
minority and one that is well organized and anxious
for expanded autonomy. The possible use of dual citizenship
as a wedge for Budapest to influence minority policies
in neighboring states is perceived by those states as
a threat to their sovereignty.
The referendum came at a time when the incumbent prime
minister of Romania, Adrian Nastase, was facing a close
presidential runoff election to be held on December
12. In order to win the election, Nastase must gain
votes from supporters of the ultra-nationalist and anti-Hungarian
Grand Romania Party, as well as maintain his alliance
with the pro-autonomist Democratic Union of Hungary,
which pursues a pragmatic approach of counting on E.U.
membership for Romania to strengthen its Hungarian minority's
case.
Expecting continued support from the Hungarian party,
Nastase responded to the referendum by citing a 1979
agreement between Budapest and Bucharest that prohibited
dual citizenship. Budapest responded that it had formally
canceled the agreement in 1990, to which Bucharest replied
that it could find no documents to that effect.
The exchange was embittered by a letter from Romanian
Foreign Minister Mircea Geoana warning that any ethnic
Hungarians who applied for Hungarian citizenship --
were the referendum to pass -- would be stripped of
their Romanian citizenship. Gyurcsany pointed out that
Romania's constitution permits dual citizenship and
that approximately 300 Romanian citizens apply for Hungarian
pensions each month. Hungarian Foreign Minister Ferenc
Somogyi took the position that "all countries have
the sovereign right to choose whom they would want to
recognize as their own citizens." He was backed
up by the European Commission, which issued a statement
on December 6 that "it was the full right of Hungary
to have a referendum on citizenship."
The Bucharest-Budapest exchanges played into the hands
of Orban's Civic Union by forcing Gyurcsany to defend
the legitimacy of the referendum at the same time that
he was urging people not to vote on it. The exchanges
also put pressure on the alliance between Nastase's
Socialists and the Democratic Union of Hungary. Both
of the Socialist leaders escaped political damage, Gyurcsany
when the referendum was defeated and Nastase when the
Democratic Union opened up negotiations with the Socialists
to form a minority government.
Conclusion
The defeat of the Hungarian referendum on dual citizenship
was a temporary victory for the E.U., but also a reminder
that unresolved problems from the past can surface having
the potential of disturbing European integration. The
success of the E.U. design to westernize Eastern Europe
depends more than anything else on robust economic growth
and broad distribution of its benefits in the region.
If rising expectations are not met, nationalist sentiments
that can be exploited politically remain close to the
surface.
Gyurcsany's success in opposing the referendum and
Nastase's success in keeping the Hungarian party on
his side were both based on the perception of their
respective constituencies and allies that European integration
is the best way to satisfy their interests. If that
perception should change, the E.U. will not so easily
overcome the European past.
Forrás: Power and Interest News
Riport, December 13, 2004. |