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Hungarian prosecutors drop charges against Budapest mayor for organising Pride march

By Thomson Reuters Jun 4, 2026 | 3:26 AM

BUDAPEST, June 4 (Reuters) – Hungarian prosecutors have dropped charges against Budapest’s liberal Mayor Gergely Karacsony over his role in organising an LGBTQ+ rights ​rally in 2025, prosecutors said on Thursday.

Tens ‌of thousands of protesters marched through Budapest in June 2025 despite a police ban, turning the Pride march into a mass anti-government demonstration in one of the biggest shows ‌of ​opposition to former nationalist Prime ⁠Minister Viktor Orban.

Orban was ⁠ousted in a landmark election on April 12 after 16 years in power by the centre-right Tisza party.

Prosecutors charged Karacsony before the election in ​January, saying he had violated the law by organising and leading a banned assembly.

Karacsony had attempted ⁠to circumvent the police ban ⁠by registering the Pride march as ​a municipal event, which he argued did not require ​a permit. The march in downtown Budapest ultimately ‌went ahead peacefully.

Prosecutors said on Thursday that they dropped the charges against Karacsony, citing a ruling by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ⁠in late April which said that Hungary’s 2021 “child protection” law violated EU law. This law served as a basis ⁠for banning the ‌Pride event.

“Considering the ruling by the ⁠European Court … the prosecutors dropped charges ​against ‌the Budapest mayor for violating the law ​on freedom ⁠of assembly,” they said.

The European court found that the legislation unlawfully restricted access to content portraying homosexuality and gender variance and breached fundamental rights and EU values.

(Reporting by Krisztina Than; Editing by Alex Richardson ​and Toby Chopra)