Europe
‘National-conservative’ CPAC convenes in Budapest

The Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), the standard-bearer of the global “national-conservative” movement, will convene tomorrow in Budapest.
The CPAC Hungary event aims to mark the European right’s “transition to activism and proactivity.” This statement was made by the director of the “Center for Fundamental Rights,” the organizer of CPAC Hungary.
Speakers at the event, established in 2022 as an extension of CPAC in the US, include leaders of the right-wing alliance Patriots for Europe (PfE), which currently forms the third-largest group in the European Parliament and includes the French National Rally (RN), the Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ), the Italian Lega, and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s party Fidesz.
Right-wing politicians from North and South America, Australia, and Israel are also expected to attend the event. Among its aims is the creation of a global network. This year’s CPAC, emboldened by the prospect of Trump’s return to the White House, has declared its goal to “conquer Brussels” after the White House.
CPAC: From a marginal Republican organization to a global network
CPAC has been organized by a Republican group in the US since 1974.
Initially designed as a networking meeting with a limited number of participants, the conference transformed into a major event with thousands of guests starting in the 2000s.
Aligned with Trumpian Republicans for over a decade, the conference offers its activists and supporters an opportunity to come together, exchange ideas, and develop relationships.
Since the beginning of US President Donald Trump’s first term in 2017, the event’s organizers have been working to expand their structures worldwide.
CPAC was established in Japan in 2017, in South Korea, Australia, and Brazil in 2019, in Mexico and Israel in 2022, and in Argentina in 2024.
In 2019, the organizers of the original CPAC began exploring Budapest to create an impact in Europe, and the first CPAC Hungary finally took place in 2022.
Organized by the Center for Fundamental Rights (Alapjogokért Központ) in Budapest, the event is held annually. Founded in 2013, the Center for Fundamental Rights operates on the basis of “national identity, sovereignty, and Christian traditions” and is an organization close to Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.
Conquering Brussels after the White House
While CPAC Hungary has primarily focused on bringing together right-wing activists, publicists, and politicians from around the world, things seem to be starting to change.
While the events in 2022 and 2023 primarily aimed at strengthening and connecting their own structures (the slogan for 2023 was “Together we are strong”), CPAC 2024 is cautiously signaling a move towards an offensive.
Miklós Szánthó, director of the Center for Fundamental Rights, the organizer of CPAC Hungary, explains that under the slogan “Woke slayers – let’s drain the swamp,” the organization has become “a bit more combative,” and the focus has shifted to “a transition to activism and proactivity.”
Szánthó states, “We must take the lead… . We must disrupt the liberals’ plans.” Regarding this year’s CPAC and its slogan (“The Age of Patriots”), Szánthó argues that “they must usher in the age of patriots, and they can only do this together.”
The Hungarian organizer, pointing out that a social concept they believe in has reached the White House across the Atlantic, also notes that in Europe, there is now a “very distinct right-wing movement” that is no longer limited to “small or even fragmented parties.”
Recalling that these parties are already in power in Italy, Szánthó emphasizes that there is also a strong right-wing current in Spain, France, and Germany, and underlines that their goal is the “conquest of Brussels.”
Ensuring the right’s victory as the status quo collapses
Szánthó explains that this year’s CPAC Hungary is taking place in a “new situation,” referring to the rise of the right in Europe and other Western countries.
“The status quo is collapsing,” says the Hungarian official, arguing that this situation clearly stems from the “Trump tsunami.”
“Our American friends are currently at the forefront of changing the status quo,” says Szánthó, while also pointing out the importance of Americans understanding that the strengthening of the European right in alliance with them is in their own interest.
According to Szánthó, the victory of the European right also guarantees the success of the American right.
Europe’s new right meets
Among the right-wing forces within the EU, CPAC Hungary is particularly close to the Patriots for Europe (PfE) party. PfE is the third-largest faction in the European Parliament with 84 members.
Politicians from various PfE member parties have been announced as speakers at CPAC Hungary. These include former Frontex head Fabrice Leggeri, who is a member of the French RN, Herbert Kickl, the leader of the Austrian right-wing FPÖ, Santiago Abascal from Spain’s Vox party, and Afrodíti Latinopoúlou from Greece’s Foní Logikís party.
Former Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki (PiS) and former Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš (ANO) will also attend the conference. Additionally, Krzysztof Bosak, Deputy Marshal of the Sejm from Poland’s Konfederacja (Confederation) party, will be present.
Hungary will be represented by several government members, including Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó. Many Republican politicians from the US will also attend the conference. Among the Americans are well-known publicists like Ben Shapiro.
Israel’s Likud party to be in Budapest
Israeli politicians have also been announced to speak at CPAC Hungary. At the PfE summit held in February, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s party, Likud, received official observer status in PfE.
According to CPAC, Israeli Diaspora Minister Amichai Chikli will travel to Budapest. Chikli caused protests in Europe in July 2024 by speaking in favor of Marine Le Pen and her party RN before the French parliamentary elections.
In early December, he also caused great outrage by expressing sympathy for right-wing candidate Călin Georgescu, who, after the first round of presidential elections in Romania, announced that he would move his country’s embassy to Jerusalem if he won.
Georgescu had praised Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, the historical leader of Romanian fascists, as a “hero”; Codreanu’s Legionary Movement was involved in numerous murders, including the massacre of Romanian Jews.
Other speakers include the prime minister’s son, Jair Netanyahu, and Likud MK Ariel Kallner.
Following the October 7 Al-Aqsa Flood Operation, Kallner had called for a “Gaza Nakba” that would “overshadow the Nakba of ’48.”
Latin America’s dictatorship sympathizers also come to Europe
Other notorious right-wingers are also attending the event. The participation of José António Kast from Chile’s “far-right” Partido Republicano de Chile has also been announced.
Kast is considered the Chilean political counterpart of Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro and Argentina’s Javier Milei. The Chilean right-winger has expressed sympathy for former dictator Augusto Pinochet in the past and received more than 44% of the votes in the second round of the presidential elections in Chile in 2021.
Kast will run again in the next presidential elections at the end of this year.
Among those planning to attend in Budapest are Raúl Latorre, President of the Paraguayan Chamber of Deputies and member of the conservative Partido Colorado, and right-wing Argentine journalist Agustín Laje, who is close to Milei.