Strasbourg, France: European Commission Head Ursula Von Der Leyen on Wednesday warned Hungary to reverse the controversial LGBTQ program – which came into force on Thursday – or facing legal consequences.
“This is this disgrace of this legislation …
it is something that flew in the faction of European Union values,” Von der Leyen, who heads the European Union executive, told the European Parliament session in Strasbourg.
“If Hungary does not improve the situation, the Commission will use its available strength as the agreement guard,” he added.
In this issue is a law, titled The “Anti-Pedophilia Act”, which was originally aimed at the toughness punishment for child abuse.
But the last draft containing amendments to the critics unites pedophilia with homosexuality and generally matigatizing support for the LGBTQ community.
“Europe will not allow the parts of our society to distigrate, both because of whom they love, because of their age, their ethnicity, their political opinions, or their religious beliefs,” Von Der Leyen said.
Every legal action launched by Von Der Leyen has the support of the majority of member countries after the EU leaders, led by the Netherlands, Perna Prime Minister Hungarian Viktor Orban at the height of his plan.
The head of the European Union Council Charles Michel, who hosted the Summit, admitted to parliamentarians that the heated discussion was “not a general practice” for the EU summit.
“Our conversation is needed, difficult, and sometimes emotional,” he said, proving that LGBTQ rights “not a marginal problem”.
The Commission is understood as a plan to be called a violation process, which amounts to a lawsuit that can cause a fine caused by the UE peak field.
Most parliamentarians support von der Leyen’s hard words for the Organization and the threat of legal processes, even though the remote parliamentarians said they supported Hungarian Law.
France Mep Nicolas Bay calls Hungarian targeting “embarrassing”.
“Hungary wants to protect his children towards gender theory.
Budapest is right,” he said.