Biggest Pride Ever? March Will Go Ahead Even If Government Prohibits It, Says Mayor

  • 21 Mar 2025 10:25 AM
Biggest Pride Ever? March Will Go Ahead Even If Government Prohibits It, Says Mayor
This year’s Budapest Pride march will go ahead as planned "and will be the biggest one yet", Gergely Karacsony, the city’s mayor, said on Facebook.

"As the mayor of the 14th district, I was the first to hang the rainbow flag on a public building," Karacsony said

"Since I’ve been mayor of Budapest, the rainbow flag has been displayed on City Hall every year, and this practice will continue even if the government prohibits it. And since I’ve been mayor, the metropolitan council has helped out with organising Budapest Pride each year and will continue to help even if the government prohibits it."

Karacsony said he was convinced that "the city belongs to everyone" and that "we can only be free if we are all free."

Budapest Pride March organisers said:

We will not let Hungary’s largest regular human rights demonstration be banned!


We are already organising the 30th Budapest Pride March, and perhaps never before has it been as important as it is now.

Even the current Fundamental Law of Hungary – which in many instances curtails fundamental rights- strictly protects freedom of assembly and freedom of expression.

The true measure of a country’s freedom isn’t whether people can express opinions that support the government—it’s whether those who challenge it can speak without fear. For years, LGBTQ people have faced attacks from those in power. Events like Pride marches reveal whether the government respects free expression or uses its authority to silence those it disagrees with.

It’s nothing more than political theater - the ruling party is using the LGBTQ community for its own gain. But we refuse to be anyone’s scapegoat. 

Those who organize Pride events in Hungary or stand up for their communities in any way are dedicated, determined citizens who want to build a better country. Threatening these patriotic people in the name of patriotism is not just hypocritical - it’s disgraceful.

While more and more people are starving in Hungary, the Prime Minister’s priority is to ban human rights protests.

At a time when people’s daily livelihoods are under threat, when families cannot heat their homes or buy their children coats, when the end-of-month argument is about whether there is money for lunch or electricity bills, the government’s task should be to solve these problems, not to think about how to further restrict the Hungarian people’s freedoms.

The slogan of this year’s Budapest Pride Festival and March is “We are (home).”

There have been countless attempts to silence, invisibilize, intimidate or outright erase members of the LGBTQ community in history. The forces of oppression have never succeeded. The existence of the LGBTQ community is as old as humanity: we have been here longer and will be here much longer than those politicians in suits campaigning for exclusion. 

They’ve tried countless times to ban our march—and failed. They won’t succeed now either. In the end, Pride is a demonstration, whether with twenty people or tens of thousands, but it will happen. We’re not just fighting for the Budapest Pride March or the LGBTQ community—we’re fighting for the right of all Hungarians to protest, speak their minds, and stand up for themselves.

Source: 
MTI - The Hungarian News Agency, founded in 1881.

*********************************

You're very welcome to comment, discuss and enjoy more stories via our Facebook page: 
Facebook.com/XpatLoopNews + via XpatLoop’s groups: Budapest Expats / Expats Hungary

You can subscribe to our newsletter here: XpatLoop.com/Newsletters

Do you want your business to reach tens of thousands of potential high-value expat customers? Then just contact us here.

Related links

Updated: Watch: Smoke Bombs in Parliament After Budapest Pride Banned

  • How does this content make you feel?

Explore More Reports

  • Updated: 'Budapest Will Not Kneel', Says Mayor to Gov't

    Updated: 'Budapest Will Not Kneel', Says Mayor to Gov't

    • 4 Dec 2025 12:00 PM

    At a "Budapest Pride March 2.0" rally outside the Carmelite Monastery, the prime minister's office, Gergely Karacsony, the mayor of Budapest, vowed the city would "not kneel", as he handed the City Assembly's resolution on its "real financial crisis" to a government representative.

  • Budget Crisis Threatens Budapest’s Public Services, City Hall Rejects Insolvency Ultimatum

    Budget Crisis Threatens Budapest’s Public Services, City Hall Rejects Insolvency Ultimatum

    • 2 Dec 2025 6:15 AM

    The financial stability of Budapest is currently at the centre of a fierce political standoff between the City Assembly and the national government. The dispute intensified this week after Mayor Gergely Karácsony and the city administration rejected a government proposal to declare the capital insolvent, an act the government had framed as a prerequisite for offering financial aid.

  • 'Budapest Pride 2.0' on Monday at Clark Adam Square Called for by Mayor

    'Budapest Pride 2.0' on Monday at Clark Adam Square Called for by Mayor

    • 28 Nov 2025 8:34 AM

    Budapest Mayor Gergely Karacsony announced on Thursday that he had convened an extraordinary assembly for Monday to reaffirm the "true financial situation" of the municipality. The decision will later be delivered to the Prime Minister’s Office in Buda Castle during a demonstration, he told a press conference.