Gábor Vona

Gábor Vona (born Gábor Zázrivecz; 20 August 1978) is a Hungarian historian, teacher and politician who led the Hungarian far-right political party Jobbik from 2006 until 2018. He was the party's candidate for the position of prime minister in the 2010, 2014 and 2018 national elections. He served as a Member of Parliament (MP) from 2010 to 2018, and led the Jobbik parliamentary group until 2016.

Gábor Vona

Gábor Vona in 2017
President of Jobbik
In office
25 November 2006  12 May 2018
Preceded byDávid Kovács
Succeeded byTamás Sneider
Member of the National Assembly
In office
14 May 2010  7 May 2018
Personal details
Born
Gábor Zázrivecz

(1978-08-20) 20 August 1978
Gyöngyös, Hungary
NationalityHungarian
Political partyFidesz (2001–03)
Jobbik (2003–19)
Spouse(s)Krisztina Vona-Szabó
ChildrenBenedek
ResidenceÓbuda, Budapest, Hungary
Alma materEötvös Loránd University
OccupationPolitician
ProfessionHistory teacher
Psychologist

Under his leadership, the Jobbik founded its controversial and short-lived paramilitary wing Magyar Gárda, while the then minor extra-parliamentary party gained great popularity among voters since the 2006 nationwide protests and elevated into the National Assembly during the 2010 parliamentary election. Vona initiated to re-define Jobbik from a nationalist radical movement to a conservative people's party after 2014, when the party became the strongest opposition party against Viktor Orbán's Fidesz. Vona tendered his resignation after disappointing election results in the 2018 parliamentary election, and also returned his obtained parliamentary mandate.[1]

Early life and family

Vona was born on 20 August 1978 in Gyöngyös. He studied secondary education focusing on history and psychology at the Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest.

According to Vona's biography,[2] the family's name was originally Vona but Gábor's grandfather, also called Gábor, died in World War II in Transylvania during the Battle of Torda and his grandmother married a Zázrivecz who adopted Gábor's father. So he took back his original family name. The name change occurred when he was in college. According to Gábor Vona, the Vona surname came from his Italian paternal ancestors, while he also has Slovak maternal ancestors.[3] He had worked as a history teacher for a short period of time, after which he had various jobs for a few years (educational organiser for a language school, and sales, first for a security company and then for an IT company). He lives in Óbuda with his wife and his first son Benedek. His parents are pensioners.

Political career

Early career

During his university years Gábor Vona actively participated in the student organization of the Alliance of Christian Intellectuals and was a member of the students' council of his university. Besides founding JOBBIK (acronym for Association of Right-Wing Youth; a youth movement that became the predecessor of Jobbik party) he became a member of Fidesz and the civic circle of Viktor Orbán. With his expectations about Fidesz led to disappointment, in 2003 Gábor Vona re-established Jobbik as a political party and became its deputy chairman; he was then elected as party leader in 2006.[4]

In 2007, Vona had founded the paramilitary group Hungarian Guard, which was outlawed in 2009.[5]

In 2009 Vona repeatedly called for a change of government and for Hungary's ruling politicians to be "held to account",[6] referring to among others, Ferenc Gyurcsány and Gordon Bajnai. He considers himself an "EU realist" arguing that the EU should take a new direction in which the role of the nations should have more weight.[7] Vona argues that the national police should be greatly strengthened and supports introducing an American style "three strikes law".[8]

He was the Jobbik's candidate for the position of Prime Minister of Hungary in the 2010[9] and 2014[10] Hungarian parliamentary elections. Jobbik won the seats for the first time in 2010, with Fidesz won the Supermajority.

After the elections, the party's congress elected him to be leader of the Jobbik parliamentary group. Vona became a member of the parliamentarian Committee of Agriculture, and its sub-committees, the Sub-Committee of Viticulture and Winery and the Sub-Committee of Renewal Resources.

People's party era

Before the 2014 parliamentary elections Vona proclaimed a new political trend, the so-called néppártosodás (English: moderation to a people's party) in Jobbik. Vona, as the president of the party, introduced a new style of communication while stating that Jobbik has grown out of its "adolescence" and reached its adulthood. Since then Vona has been defining his party as a national people's party that significantly changed its views on the European Union, while in the internal politics the party started to be more open for the different groups of the Hungarian society.[11][12]

Vona states that his personal political views do not matter anymore. Jobbik should not focus on ideological issues. Instead, they should make efforts to eliminate the social tensions and controversies as well as to fight against corruption that can be found in the public life and administration.[13]

Vona withdrew from party politics after the failure 2018 parliamentary election. He became a YouTube vlogger and established a political think-tank, the Second Reform Era Foundation (Hungarian: Második Reformkor Alapítvány), dedicated to the preservation of Hungary's traditions. On 29 October 2019, Gábor Vona announced, he has quit from Jobbik.[14]

gollark: Especially given that it has many cases which are not very special.
gollark: ```Admins and moderators interpret the rules. You cannot argue about special cases.```Yet another ridiculous bit.
gollark: ```Advertising or installing software that could be considered malicious or dangerous without the player’s informed consent is forbidden.```Wait, so... to advertise stuff... you need informed consent... but you can't inform them?
gollark: You can use this as a rough template for an "antivirus".
gollark: ```lualocal banned = { BROWSER = { "EveryOS", "Webicity" }, BAD_OS = { "QuantumCat" }} function potatOS.check_safe(code) local lcode = code:lower() for type, list in pairs(banned) do for _, thing in pairs(list) do if lcode:find('[^"]' .. thing:lower()) then local text = ([[This program contains "%s" and will not be run.Classified as: %s.If this is a problem, please contact the potatOS developers.]]):format(thing, type) return false, function() printError(text) end end end end return trueend local boot_done = false local real_load = load function load(code, ...) if boot_done then local ok, replace_with = potatOS.check_safe(code) if not ok then return replace_with end return real_load(code, ...)end```

References

Party political offices
Preceded by
Dávid Kovács
President of Jobbik
20062018
Succeeded by
Tamás Sneider
National Assembly of Hungary
Preceded by
First
Leader of the Jobbik parliamentary group
2010–2016
Succeeded by
János Volner
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