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Poland, Hungary fume over Bill Clinton ‘dictatorship’ remark

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Poland and Hungary have blasted Bill Clinton over a remark by the former US president accusing the ex-communist EU and NATO countries of taking an authoritarian turn and wanting "Putin-like leadership".

"Poland and Hungary, two countries that would not be free but for the United States and the long Cold War, have now decided that this democracy is too much trouble," Clinton said at an election rally last week for Democratic party presidential front-runner and spouse, Hillary Clinton.

"They want Putin-like leadership; just give me an authoritarian dictatorship and keep the foreigners out. Sounds familiar?" he said, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin in what also appeared to be a swipe against outspoken anti-immigrant Republican presumptive White House nominee Donald Trump.

Poland's rightwing leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski lashed out at the Putin comparison, recommending that Clinton "seek medical attention".

"Anyone claiming that democracy doesn't exist in Poland today ought to seek medical attention," Kaczynski told reporters in Warsaw late Tuesday.

Although he holds no cabinet post, the leader of the governing populist Law and Justice (PiS) party is widely regarded as the real powerbroker in the government that swept to power on an anti-migrant and populist spending platform in October elections.

Critics both at home and abroad have blasted the rightwing governments in both Poland and Hungary, accusing them of rolling back democratic freedoms by tightening their grip on public media and undermining other democratic checks and balances.

Budapest and Warsaw have also refused to accept refugees as part of an EU-wide quota system designed to tackle Europe's worst migrant crisis since World War II.

"Bill Clinton knows that Hungarians decided about Hungary's future at democratic parliamentary elections," Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto told local media Tuesday.

"Maybe he doesn't like the decision made by Hungarians, but that's not enough reason for the former US president to insult them."

Poland and Hungary have blasted Bill Clinton over a remark by the former US president accusing the ex-communist EU and NATO countries of taking an authoritarian turn and wanting “Putin-like leadership”.

“Poland and Hungary, two countries that would not be free but for the United States and the long Cold War, have now decided that this democracy is too much trouble,” Clinton said at an election rally last week for Democratic party presidential front-runner and spouse, Hillary Clinton.

“They want Putin-like leadership; just give me an authoritarian dictatorship and keep the foreigners out. Sounds familiar?” he said, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin in what also appeared to be a swipe against outspoken anti-immigrant Republican presumptive White House nominee Donald Trump.

Poland’s rightwing leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski lashed out at the Putin comparison, recommending that Clinton “seek medical attention”.

“Anyone claiming that democracy doesn’t exist in Poland today ought to seek medical attention,” Kaczynski told reporters in Warsaw late Tuesday.

Although he holds no cabinet post, the leader of the governing populist Law and Justice (PiS) party is widely regarded as the real powerbroker in the government that swept to power on an anti-migrant and populist spending platform in October elections.

Critics both at home and abroad have blasted the rightwing governments in both Poland and Hungary, accusing them of rolling back democratic freedoms by tightening their grip on public media and undermining other democratic checks and balances.

Budapest and Warsaw have also refused to accept refugees as part of an EU-wide quota system designed to tackle Europe’s worst migrant crisis since World War II.

“Bill Clinton knows that Hungarians decided about Hungary’s future at democratic parliamentary elections,” Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto told local media Tuesday.

“Maybe he doesn’t like the decision made by Hungarians, but that’s not enough reason for the former US president to insult them.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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