EU bullies are forcing proud countries out of the Union, says TIM NEWARK

IF WE needed yet another reason why it’s good news that we’ve finally taken a big step towards Brexit then the European Commission provided it this week.

Immigration and border patrol in HungaryGETTY

Hungary is one of the countries refusing to accept the EU's massive migrant quotas

In a largely underreported story the EU is taking legal action against Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic for refusing to accept their massive migrant quotas

These nations quite rightly stuck to their guns and refused to help German Chancellor Merkel’s catastrophic open-door policy to mainly Muslim migrants – and now the EU wants to take them to the European Court of Justice. 

As the hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants surged across Central Europe in 2015 it was the bold Hungarians who could see this was bad news and introduced their own strict border controls, halting the flow so that those unable to get to Germany remained in Greece and Italy. 

Furious Brussels mandarins said this was not acceptable and insisted that Hungary share the refugee burden along with other Eastern European states.

But this was Germany’s fault, they argued.  

Not once had Frau Merkel asked them their views on the unfolding crisis. 

Acting as the de facto Empress of Europe, the Chancellor had high-handedly issued a reckless invitation to hundreds of thousands of refugees, assuming that the EU would then sort this out by relocating the immigrants throughout the union. 

Brussels jumped to her command and hoped to intimidate Hungary and the other Eastern European countries by hitting them where it hurt most – in the pocket – by threatening to cut off their flow of financial subsidies. 

But the EU bureaucrats had badly miscalculated. 

Hungary and Poland are governed by fiercely nationalistic leaders who seized the opportunity to stand up to the EU bullies.  

Andrzej Duda speaking at the United NationsGETTY

Andrzej Duda is the current President of the Republic of Poland

Key to their resistance was a wish to protect their nations against a sudden influx of immigrants with different cultural values. 

Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic are all strongly Christian countries.

Until a century ago many of their citizens lived under the Austro-Hungarian Habsburg empire and that was a mighty bulwark against the Ottoman Islamic Turks. 

You only have to spend a few days in any of these beautiful countries to understand how the shadow of Islamic conquest still hangs over them. 

Many of their museums proudly display trophies captured from the Turks at the siege of Vienna in 1683.  

Nuns and priests praying in HungaryGETTY

Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic are all strongly Christian countries

The Ottoman Empire remained a threat to them until 1922 when it was dissolved after the First World War.  

So it’s not exactly ancient history and neither Hungarian nor Polish governments were going to invite thousands of Muslims to settle within their mainly Christian communities. 

Of course, to largely secular bureaucrats living in Brussels this seemed absurdly out of date but history matters to nations whose sense of identity has been badly shaken by decades of communist totalitarian rule. 

These nations are all now democracies and are entitled to protect their own citizens and culture in their own way. 

As net receivers of EU subsidies they can see the economic benefits of the union but they are not slow now in rejecting the political diktats of their prosperous, liberal neighbours.  

Immigrants near the Hungarian borderGETTY

Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia took 28 of the migrants allocated by the EU in 2015

In fact the migrant crisis reinforced the determination of the Visegrad Group – Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia – to stand together and reject the demands of the EU to relocate some 160,000 refugees across the bloc.  

Out of the 11,069 migrants they were allocated in 2015 they have taken only 28. 

This summer European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker announced he was in favour of the EU taking legal action against them. 

“Not to make a threat,” he said, “but to make clear that decisions that have been made [by the EU] are applicable law, even if you have voted against them.” 

So there you go, on something as important as national identity and security, no nation within the EU has the ability to protect its own borders if the other nations outvote them.  

Angela MerkelGETTY

Angela Merkel is paying a heavy political price for her open-door migrant policy

Since then of course Chancellor Merkel has paid a heavy political price for her open-door migrant policy and any Hungarian or Polish leader would be committing electoral suicide if they backed down.  

“Security policy is national, not European, competence,” said the Polish interior minister. 

It is interesting to note that Hungary is also being taken to the European Court of Justice over laws it has introduced to counter the influence of Hungarian-born billionaire George Soros. 

Soros is the speculator who made a fortune betting against the UK in the 1992 sterling crisis. 

A leading patron of the global liberal elite he is now using his billions to fund his Open Society Foundations that spread his pro-migration views around the world, especially in his former homeland.  

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor OrbanGETTY

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban

Needless to say Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban is not happy with this and wants to use his domestic law to identify such meddling institutions as “foreign-funded”. 

Quite rightly so but the EU appears to be more than happy to do the bidding of Soros and prosecute Hungary over this. 

It all makes one profoundly grateful that thanks to Theresa May’s negotiations we are one step closer towards Brexit and taking back control of our own borders. 

But by insisting on taking a train-crash approach to legal action against Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic, it appears that the EU may well be on course to forcing those proud countries to take a deep breath and ditch the EU themselves. 

We can only hope so.

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EU bullies are forcing proud countries out of the Union, says TIM NEWARK

IF WE needed yet another reason why it’s good news that we’ve finally taken a big step towards Brexit then the European Commission provided it this week.

Immigration and border patrol in HungaryGETTY

Hungary is one of the countries refusing to accept the EU's massive migrant quotas

In a largely underreported story the EU is taking legal action against Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic for refusing to accept their massive migrant quotas

These nations quite rightly stuck to their guns and refused to help German Chancellor Merkel’s catastrophic open-door policy to mainly Muslim migrants – and now the EU wants to take them to the European Court of Justice. 

As the hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants surged across Central Europe in 2015 it was the bold Hungarians who could see this was bad news and introduced their own strict border controls, halting the flow so that those unable to get to Germany remained in Greece and Italy. 

Furious Brussels mandarins said this was not acceptable and insisted that Hungary share the refugee burden along with other Eastern European states.

But this was Germany’s fault, they argued.  

Not once had Frau Merkel asked them their views on the unfolding crisis. 

Acting as the de facto Empress of Europe, the Chancellor had high-handedly issued a reckless invitation to hundreds of thousands of refugees, assuming that the EU would then sort this out by relocating the immigrants throughout the union. 

Brussels jumped to her command and hoped to intimidate Hungary and the other Eastern European countries by hitting them where it hurt most – in the pocket – by threatening to cut off their flow of financial subsidies. 

But the EU bureaucrats had badly miscalculated. 

Hungary and Poland are governed by fiercely nationalistic leaders who seized the opportunity to stand up to the EU bullies.  

Andrzej Duda speaking at the United NationsGETTY

Andrzej Duda is the current President of the Republic of Poland

Key to their resistance was a wish to protect their nations against a sudden influx of immigrants with different cultural values. 

Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic are all strongly Christian countries.

Until a century ago many of their citizens lived under the Austro-Hungarian Habsburg empire and that was a mighty bulwark against the Ottoman Islamic Turks. 

You only have to spend a few days in any of these beautiful countries to understand how the shadow of Islamic conquest still hangs over them. 

Many of their museums proudly display trophies captured from the Turks at the siege of Vienna in 1683.  

Nuns and priests praying in HungaryGETTY

Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic are all strongly Christian countries

The Ottoman Empire remained a threat to them until 1922 when it was dissolved after the First World War.  

So it’s not exactly ancient history and neither Hungarian nor Polish governments were going to invite thousands of Muslims to settle within their mainly Christian communities. 

Of course, to largely secular bureaucrats living in Brussels this seemed absurdly out of date but history matters to nations whose sense of identity has been badly shaken by decades of communist totalitarian rule. 

These nations are all now democracies and are entitled to protect their own citizens and culture in their own way. 

As net receivers of EU subsidies they can see the economic benefits of the union but they are not slow now in rejecting the political diktats of their prosperous, liberal neighbours.  

Immigrants near the Hungarian borderGETTY

Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia took 28 of the migrants allocated by the EU in 2015

In fact the migrant crisis reinforced the determination of the Visegrad Group – Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia – to stand together and reject the demands of the EU to relocate some 160,000 refugees across the bloc.  

Out of the 11,069 migrants they were allocated in 2015 they have taken only 28. 

This summer European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker announced he was in favour of the EU taking legal action against them. 

“Not to make a threat,” he said, “but to make clear that decisions that have been made [by the EU] are applicable law, even if you have voted against them.” 

So there you go, on something as important as national identity and security, no nation within the EU has the ability to protect its own borders if the other nations outvote them.  

Angela MerkelGETTY

Angela Merkel is paying a heavy political price for her open-door migrant policy

Since then of course Chancellor Merkel has paid a heavy political price for her open-door migrant policy and any Hungarian or Polish leader would be committing electoral suicide if they backed down.  

“Security policy is national, not European, competence,” said the Polish interior minister. 

It is interesting to note that Hungary is also being taken to the European Court of Justice over laws it has introduced to counter the influence of Hungarian-born billionaire George Soros. 

Soros is the speculator who made a fortune betting against the UK in the 1992 sterling crisis. 

A leading patron of the global liberal elite he is now using his billions to fund his Open Society Foundations that spread his pro-migration views around the world, especially in his former homeland.  

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor OrbanGETTY

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban

Needless to say Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban is not happy with this and wants to use his domestic law to identify such meddling institutions as “foreign-funded”. 

Quite rightly so but the EU appears to be more than happy to do the bidding of Soros and prosecute Hungary over this. 

It all makes one profoundly grateful that thanks to Theresa May’s negotiations we are one step closer towards Brexit and taking back control of our own borders. 

But by insisting on taking a train-crash approach to legal action against Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic, it appears that the EU may well be on course to forcing those proud countries to take a deep breath and ditch the EU themselves. 

We can only hope so.

EU bullies are forcing proud countries out of the Union, says TIM NEWARK

IF WE needed yet another reason why it’s good news that we’ve finally taken a big step towards Brexit then the European Commission provided it this week.

Immigration and border patrol in HungaryGETTY

Hungary is one of the countries refusing to accept the EU's massive migrant quotas

In a largely underreported story the EU is taking legal action against Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic for refusing to accept their massive migrant quotas

These nations quite rightly stuck to their guns and refused to help German Chancellor Merkel’s catastrophic open-door policy to mainly Muslim migrants – and now the EU wants to take them to the European Court of Justice. 

As the hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants surged across Central Europe in 2015 it was the bold Hungarians who could see this was bad news and introduced their own strict border controls, halting the flow so that those unable to get to Germany remained in Greece and Italy. 

Furious Brussels mandarins said this was not acceptable and insisted that Hungary share the refugee burden along with other Eastern European states.

But this was Germany’s fault, they argued.  

Not once had Frau Merkel asked them their views on the unfolding crisis. 

Acting as the de facto Empress of Europe, the Chancellor had high-handedly issued a reckless invitation to hundreds of thousands of refugees, assuming that the EU would then sort this out by relocating the immigrants throughout the union. 

Brussels jumped to her command and hoped to intimidate Hungary and the other Eastern European countries by hitting them where it hurt most – in the pocket – by threatening to cut off their flow of financial subsidies. 

But the EU bureaucrats had badly miscalculated. 

Hungary and Poland are governed by fiercely nationalistic leaders who seized the opportunity to stand up to the EU bullies.  

Andrzej Duda speaking at the United NationsGETTY

Andrzej Duda is the current President of the Republic of Poland

Key to their resistance was a wish to protect their nations against a sudden influx of immigrants with different cultural values. 

Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic are all strongly Christian countries.

Until a century ago many of their citizens lived under the Austro-Hungarian Habsburg empire and that was a mighty bulwark against the Ottoman Islamic Turks. 

You only have to spend a few days in any of these beautiful countries to understand how the shadow of Islamic conquest still hangs over them. 

Many of their museums proudly display trophies captured from the Turks at the siege of Vienna in 1683.  

Nuns and priests praying in HungaryGETTY

Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic are all strongly Christian countries

The Ottoman Empire remained a threat to them until 1922 when it was dissolved after the First World War.  

So it’s not exactly ancient history and neither Hungarian nor Polish governments were going to invite thousands of Muslims to settle within their mainly Christian communities. 

Of course, to largely secular bureaucrats living in Brussels this seemed absurdly out of date but history matters to nations whose sense of identity has been badly shaken by decades of communist totalitarian rule. 

These nations are all now democracies and are entitled to protect their own citizens and culture in their own way. 

As net receivers of EU subsidies they can see the economic benefits of the union but they are not slow now in rejecting the political diktats of their prosperous, liberal neighbours.  

Immigrants near the Hungarian borderGETTY

Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia took 28 of the migrants allocated by the EU in 2015

In fact the migrant crisis reinforced the determination of the Visegrad Group – Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia – to stand together and reject the demands of the EU to relocate some 160,000 refugees across the bloc.  

Out of the 11,069 migrants they were allocated in 2015 they have taken only 28. 

This summer European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker announced he was in favour of the EU taking legal action against them. 

“Not to make a threat,” he said, “but to make clear that decisions that have been made [by the EU] are applicable law, even if you have voted against them.” 

So there you go, on something as important as national identity and security, no nation within the EU has the ability to protect its own borders if the other nations outvote them.  

Angela MerkelGETTY

Angela Merkel is paying a heavy political price for her open-door migrant policy

Since then of course Chancellor Merkel has paid a heavy political price for her open-door migrant policy and any Hungarian or Polish leader would be committing electoral suicide if they backed down.  

“Security policy is national, not European, competence,” said the Polish interior minister. 

It is interesting to note that Hungary is also being taken to the European Court of Justice over laws it has introduced to counter the influence of Hungarian-born billionaire George Soros. 

Soros is the speculator who made a fortune betting against the UK in the 1992 sterling crisis. 

A leading patron of the global liberal elite he is now using his billions to fund his Open Society Foundations that spread his pro-migration views around the world, especially in his former homeland.  

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor OrbanGETTY

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban

Needless to say Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban is not happy with this and wants to use his domestic law to identify such meddling institutions as “foreign-funded”. 

Quite rightly so but the EU appears to be more than happy to do the bidding of Soros and prosecute Hungary over this. 

It all makes one profoundly grateful that thanks to Theresa May’s negotiations we are one step closer towards Brexit and taking back control of our own borders. 

But by insisting on taking a train-crash approach to legal action against Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic, it appears that the EU may well be on course to forcing those proud countries to take a deep breath and ditch the EU themselves. 

We can only hope so.

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