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Hungary Votes No: Parliament Rejects Support for Ukraine's EU Membership

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The Hungarian parliament has adopted a resolution formally opposing both financial support for Ukraine and its path toward European Union membership. The vote passed 142 to 28, with four abstentions. The document, titled "On rejecting support for Ukraine's EU membership, war, and transformation of EU into military alliance," represents the most explicit legislative statement yet from Budapest on its position regarding Kyiv's European aspirations.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban defended the vote, arguing that Ukraine was pursuing EU accession on terms it was not entitled to dictate. "EU accession is based on merit," Orban said. "Conditions are set by member states, not candidate countries." His government has long positioned itself as a dissenting voice within the bloc on matters related to Ukraine, consistently blocking or delaying EU-level financial and military assistance packages destined for Kyiv.

The resolution deepens the friction between Budapest and the rest of the EU, which has overwhelmingly supported Ukraine's candidacy and continued to channel substantial aid toward the country's war effort. Hungary's repeated use of its veto power has drawn criticism from other member states and European Commission officials, who argue that Budapest is acting outside the spirit of EU solidarity. The vote is unlikely to alter the bloc's overall trajectory on Ukraine policy, but it signals that Hungary's dissent has now been formally codified in domestic law.