After massive protests, Hungarian PM scraps Internet tax plan

Hungary’s prime minister on Friday shelved plans to introduce an Internet tax that had sparked major demonstrations and further concerns about civil liberties in the EU member state. Proposed changes to the tax code that would have imposed a new levy on online data transfers “cannot be introduced in its current form,” the right-wing Viktor Orban, 51, said in a morning radio interview. He said that the legislation, which was to have been voted on in parliament November 17, would be amended and that a “national consultation” on the Internet and taxes would be organised starting in January. The proposed Internet tax was seen by Orban critics as the latest step to silence dissent, particularly since Hungarians have to go mostly online to find news that doesn’t toe the government line. On Sunday more than 20,000 people took part in a demonstration against the measure in Budapest, and two days later over 50,000 took to the streets. There were also protests in other towns. The European Union has criticised the proposed legislation, with a spokesman for EU digital commissioner Neelie Kroes calling it a “particularly bad idea” and “part of that pattern of actions which have limited freedoms” in Hungary.

Nothing can be introduced in these circumstances.

Viktor Orban, prime minister of Hungary