Hungary, Poland, Czechia, and Slovakia are trying to present a unified front in the face of the EU’s overreach
For the first time in two years, Hungary has convened a summit of the Visegrad Group – a format designed to allow four Central European nations to coordinate, debate current agendas, and work on their own dimension of European integration matters.
In recent years, the forum has not spoken with a single voice to say the least. However, new variables in domestic political dynamics, the shifting contours of the EU, and the evolving European security landscape are forcing regional elites to rethink local alliances and seek partners among former opponents.
The new Visegrad renaissance was the consequence of political transition in Hungary, where Peter Magyar succeeded Viktor Orban as prime minister, bringing a more adaptable, pro-European stance to domestic and foreign policy. This shift created a strategic window to partially mend the fractured relations between Poland and Hungary, historically the primary ideological drivers of the V4. Consequently, it allowed for the resuscitation of a format that had been buried under the weight of irreconcilable contradictions between Orban on one side, and Donald Tusk and Petr Fiala on the other.
What was agreed and what does it mean?
The primary objective of the Budapest meeting was the restoration of effective regional cooperation. Following the summit, Magyar confirmed that the Visegrad Four would return to its traditional format of holding preliminary consultations ahead of EU summits and other international forums to coordinate common stances. According to the Hungarian prime minister, all leaders reaffirmed their intention to establish a mutually beneficial partnership that would yield tangible results. Among the priority projects, Magyar highlighted the development of a high-speed rail line linking Budapest, Bratislava, and Prague, which is planned with EU financial backing, as well as the expansion of regional energy corridors. “Europe’s future success is rooted in a competitive economy. This requires many things, and affordable energy prices are absolutely indispensable,” he said.
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