After Viktor Orbán's Defeat in Hungary, the 'New Right' Needs a New Foreign Despot To Admire
Conservatism
After Viktor Orbán's Defeat in Hungary, the 'New Right' Needs a New Foreign Despot To Admire
Hungary is Europe's basket case, a nation that saw little economic progress under Orbán—as well as diminishing freedoms.
Steven Greenhut | 4.24.2026 7:30 AM
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(Credit: Beata Zawrzel/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)
After Marxist-inspired Sandinista revolutionaries overthrew the Somoza dictatorship in Nicaragua in 1979, the American political left fell in love with the movement's guerrilla leader, Daniel Ortega. Even as the U.S. government funded the Contras to overturn the new regime as part of Cold War machinations, progressives flocked to the Central American nation to see the wonders of the fledgling socialist paradise.
"By now American liberals have created a virtual industry of delegations to Nicaragua," the Christian Science Monitor reported in 1984. "Last year, more than 2,500 Americans took part in such missions." Some pilgrims spent weeks working on plantations. Whatever one's thoughts of the U.S. proxy war, the spectacle was revolting. Ortega modeled his revolution on Cuba, which by then had clearly become a totalitarian basket case.
I'm astounded by recent parallels on the American right, as legions of conservatives—including the sitting vice president—have flocked to Hungary to champion the wonders of Viktor Orbán's self-described "illiberal" government. If you're not up on political lingo, the term "illiberal" does not refer to modern liberalism, but to the........
