BUDAPEST, Hungary — Former President Donald Trump made room during his debate with Vice President Kamala Harris to express the mutual admiration he shares with Viktor Orbán, the autocratic leader of Hungary who has cozied up with Russia and China and became a thorn in the side of his allies.
''They call him a strongman. He's a tough person, smart,'' Trump said of Orbán in response to Harris' assertion that world leaders are ''laughing'' at the former president.
''Look, Viktor Orbán said it. He said, ‘The most respected, the most feared person is Donald Trump. We had no problems when Trump was president,''' Trump said.
Why is Orbán popular with conservatives?
Orbán, a right-wing populist and the European Union's longest-serving leader, has become an icon to some U.S. conservatives for championing what he calls ''illiberal democracy,'' which includes some of the EU's harshest restrictions on immigration and LGBTQ+ rights.
He has also cracked down on the press and judiciary in the formerly Communist Central European country and been accused by the EU of violating rule-of-law and democracy standards, all while vigorously pursuing ever deeper relations with Beijing and Moscow, considered adversaries by his allies in the NATO military alliance.
Yet despite the growing consensus in the West that Orbán has abridged fundamental freedoms in Hungary, Trump and his wing of the Republican party have embraced him. While still in office in 2019, Trump welcomed Orbán for a meeting in the Oval Office, unnerving some lawmakers, while his former senior adviser, Steve Bannon, called the Hungarian leader ''Trump before Trump.''
The former president as well as such conservative eminences like Tucker Carlson have praised Orbán's zero-tolerance attitude toward immigration — he built a double-layered fence along Hungary's southern border in 2015, after hundreds of thousands of refugees, mostly from Syria, fled into Europe.