PODCAST · news
Budapest
by Ivan Scalfarotto
Democracy is under siege — not just in Hungary, but across the world.Budapest is where the cracks show first, and where people fight back.Every other week, Ivan Scalfarotto sits down with activists, dissidents, scholars, and political leaders to understand why democracies slide into authoritarianism — and how they can be defended.With reason, not rage.Author and host: Ivan ScalfarottoEditor and social media: LudovicaTaurisanoGraphic designer: Paola De BartoloVisual identity: Martina SanturriSound designer: Enrico Cabua
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Ep. 7 - The true cost of Brexit, with Greg Hands
Greg Hands has been involved in British politics and public life for over 30 years. He served as Member of Parliament for Chelsea and Fulham from 2005 to 2024 and held several key government roles, including Minister for the Budget, Energy, and Trade, as well as Chairman of the Conservative Party.Brexit, he argues, definitively broke a taboo: a country as deeply tied to the European Union as the United Kingdom — in its legal frameworks, its trade, its daily life — chose to leave. And that choice came with a price.In this episode, Hands explains how the British people experienced the referendum, the real role played by Nigel Farage in the Leave campaign, and the consequences of that decision — not only economic, but above all political. And he leaves us with an uncomfortable question: even if we disagree with Brexit, would we be ready to rejoin the EU under today's circumstances?With reason, not rage.In this episode:Eastern Europe and the legacy of the WallBetween Conservatives and Labour: an overview of the British electoral systemBrexit and its legacyUK and EU: a future of cooperation?The Green Party and an overly broad coalitionTimestamps 1:50 1986–2026: the Hungarian parable 4:30 Nationalism in Eastern Europe 7:30 Margaret Thatcher would have liked Brexit? 12:00 Brexit broke a taboo 15:30 Nigel Farage is superficially popular 19:00 Would the UK rejoin the EU? 23:00 How far Brexit can go 26:40 The legacy of Brexit on trade agreements 31:30 The political impact of the referendum 35:00 An insight into the British electoral system 41:20 The UK Green Party's coalition is perhaps too broad 47:00 Risks of polarization in the UK political spectrum 49:30 You may not like the alternative to liberal democracyAuthor and host: Ivan Scalfarotto Editor and social media: Ludovica Taurisano Graphic designer: Paola De BartoloVisual identity: Martina Santurri Sound designer: Enrico Cabua
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Ep. 6 - Democracy Is a System Not a Person, with Thomas Carothers
For the sixth episode of Budapest, I was joined by Thomas Carothers — senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and one of the world's leading scholars of democratic backsliding and democracy promotion.From the United States to Poland, autocracies don't rise by chance — they follow a playbook. Together with Thomas, we explore how that playbook deploys, how to recognise it before it's too late, and why a solid system of checks and balances remains democracy's most reliable defence. European democracies are under pressure too: from the economic fragility of the middle class, and from a failure to make the case for what immigration actually brings. Yet Carothers reminds us that democracy is an ongoing process — and there is always time to challenge our own way of thinking.In this episode:∙ The pressures on Western democracies∙ The legacy of Donald Trump's presidency on the US system∙ Immigration and diversity: challenges or resources for democracies?∙ How the autocratic playbook worksWith reason, not rage.Timestamps1:05 – Elections in Hungary matter for the EU4:40 – The turning point in American politics10:00 – The legacy of Trump's presidency16:00 – Building democracy is a cultural process18:50 – Why the autocratic playbook spread22:20 – The anti-LGBTQ+ propaganda25:40 – Weaknesses in Western Europe30:50 – All the reasons why we need immigration33:40 – The Polish case and the role of the judiciary37:30 – Democracy can always get back41:00 – Get out of your bubbleAuthor and host: Ivan ScalfarottoEditor and social media: Ludovica TaurisanoGraphic designer: Paola De BartoloVisual identity: Martina SanturriSound designer: Enrico Cabua
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Ep. 5 - Politics Is Emotion Not Just Fact, with Catherine De Vries
Catherine De Vries is Vice Dean and Professor of Political Science at IE University, where she specialises in far-right politics, populism, and European public opinion.De Vries brings a scholar's rigour and a rare gift for connecting theory to everyday life. The far right succeeds not by solving problems, but by being seen to take them seriously. Politics, she argues, is not only about facts — it is about emotion. If liberal democracy fails to recognise this, it will keep losing ground to forces that offer recognition over solutions.The conversation moves from the Netherlands — a country at the heart of the European Union — to the broader crisis of European legitimacy. De Vries argues that the EU has the potential to navigate the current international chaos, but only if it learns to reconnect with the citizens it has lost.In this episode:- The Dutch case and a very personal story- Why the far right wins- Immigration as a false problem- How the EU can survive in a hostile environmentWith reason, not rage.Timestamps00:00 Introduction01:32 Budapest is everywhere — even in small cities03:00 A personal story of resistance and anger05:22 JD Vance sees the symptoms, not the cause07:45 How the far right rose in the Netherlands11:30 The state is not delivering for people — and it's not just about money16:00 Is immigration really a far-right issue?22:00 Politics is emotion, not just fact24:00 What is the perception of the EU right now?29:00 What effective sovereignty for member states means32:35 How Europe can survive Euroscepticism35:00 Donald Trump is hostile to the EU — and he is not the only one42:30 The Green Deal's real impact44:20 Healthy political debate can save democracyAuthor and host: Ivan ScalfarottoEditor and social media: Ludovica TaurisanoGraphic designer: Paola De BartoloVisual identity: Martina SanturriSound designer: Enrico Cabua
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Ep. 4 - The Georgian Dream Is a Nightmare, with Marika Mikiashvili
For the fourth episode of Budapest, I was joined by Marika Mikiashvili — lecturer at Alte University in Tbilisi, and Secretary for Foreign Affairs of Droa, part of the Coalition for Change, Georgia's largest democratic alliance.Georgia sits at a strategic crossroads in the South Caucasus — and its ruling party, Georgian Dream, has been steadily opening the door to Russian influence. How does a government build legitimacy on electoral fraud and war propaganda? Together with Marika, we explore the Georgian crisis: a hypercentralized state where the billionaire oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili is pulling his country away from Europe — and toward the Kremlin.If you want to support the struggle for democracy and freedom of the Georgian people, donate at georgiaprotest.comIn this episode: ∙ The South Caucasus in the international chessboard ∙ The true face of Georgian Dream ∙ The 2024 electoral fraud ∙ Political prisoners and chemical weapons ∙ The Russian Trojan horse ∙ What the European Union can do for the Georgian peopleWith reason, not rage.Timestamps 1:03 – What is your Budapest? The Caucasus dilemma 4:30 – The true face of Georgian Dream and the power of false narratives 9:10 – Elections in 2024: the fraud 17:30 – A year of protest: the regime versus the population in a limbo 22:30 – Too many political prisoners in Georgia 28:40 – Chemical weapons on the population 29:30 – Who is the billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili 32:00 – How a hypercentralized, feudal State controls your life 35:00 – Georgia: the Russian Trojan horse 39:00 – The global power of narrative on war and morality 44:45 – A call for European leaders 52:00 – Four actions to support democracy in GeorgiaAuthor and host: Ivan Scalfarotto Editor and social media: Ludovica Taurisano Graphic designer: Paola De Bartolo Visual identity: Martina Santurri Sound designer: Enrico Cabua
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Ep. 3 - Inside Hungary's Hybrid Regime, with Péter Krekó
For the third episode of Budapest, I spoke to Péter Krekó, director of the Political Capital Institute and one of Hungary's leading experts on disinformation, working in partnership with the European Digital Media Observatory. As a behavioral and political scientist as well as a disinformation expert, in this episode he takes us into the nuances of a regime that can be considered hybrid.Since 2010, Viktor Orbán and Fidesz have transformed Hungary into a hybrid regime by reshaping institutions and consolidating control over the media. Rather than relying on open repression, the government built an "informational autocracy," manipulating the media landscape to tilt the electoral playing field.Hungary is heading toward its 2026 elections: will the government change, and with it its relationship with the European Union?In this episode:The Orbán model: from 2010 to the current hybrid regimeWho is still supporting Viktor OrbánHow media pluralism shapes democracyHungary and its membership in the European UnionThe relationship between Giorgia Meloni and Viktor OrbánWith reason, not rage.Timestamps: 1:15 — What is your Budapest? 4:30 — Not Just a Common Election: The Rise of Orbán in 20107:15 — How Orbán Captured the Media11:10 — Has Hungary Given Up on Democracy? 20:40 — What an Orbán Voter Looks Like25:25 — How an Independent European Think Tank Can Survive in a Hybrid Regime 31:15 — An Ambiguous Triangle: EU, Hungary and Italy 35:00 — The Peacock Dance40:00 — Giorgia Meloni Seen from Budapest" 50:18 — Democracy Needs Pluralist MediaAuthor and host: Ivan ScalfarottoEditor and social media: Ludovica TaurisanoGraphic designer: Paola De BartoloVisual identity: Martina SanturriSound designer: Enrico Cabua
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Ep. 2 – What Trade Means in the Global Disorder, with Cecilia Malmström
For the second episode of Budapest, I was joined by Cecilia Malmström — former MEP, European Commissioner, and Swedish EU Minister — one of the key figures in European Union trade policy over the past two decades.Trade was long conceived as a strategy to strengthen bonds between countries, and helped hundreds of millions come out of poverty. When did it become a means for aggressive foreign policies? Together with Cecilia, we explore international trade — its potential for the EU and beyond — despite the populist fantasy of self-sufficient national economies.In this episode:∙ Trade as a weapon∙ European commercial policy: what we are doing right or wrong∙ The true impact of Donald Trump’s tariffs on our economies∙ Which countries are still benefiting from WTO∙ The legacy of populism on international tradeWith reason, not rage.Timestamps1:33 – What Budapest means to Cecilia Malmström2:55 – Trade: from tool for cooperation to its weaponization7:32 – Can the EU still act as one?12:55 – The new relationship with NATO14:48 – How the EU is handling tariffs and why it’s hard to negotiate with Donald Trump21:13 – The Airbus affair24:00 – The US no longer like us: can we still be friends?25:15 – How the WTO is doing and how China is benefiting from it29:48 – Populists are manipulating Mercosur40:41 – We need to see positive benefits of trade in domestic policies46:44 – Do not obey in advanceAuthor and host: Ivan ScalfarottoEditor and social media: LudovicaTaurisanoGraphic designer: Paola De BartoloVisual identity: Martina SanturriSound designer: Enrico Cabua
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Ep. 1 - The State of Democracy, with Nathalie Tocci
In my inaugural episode, I sit down with Nathalie Tocci — Director of the Istituto Affari Internazionali, former special advisor to EU High Representatives Mogherini and Borrell, and one of Europe's leading voices on foreign policy.From Trump's legacy to Greenland, from Iran's streets to Meloni's true intentions, we map the global state of liberal democracy — where it's crumbling, where it's holding, and what we can do about it.In this episode:What the US can (and cannot) resistVenezuela, Iran, and the limits of protestIs a new colonial order emerging?Europe's internal enemiesOne concrete thing you can do to defend democracyWith reason, not rage.Timestamps:0:57 What is your Budapest? 4:55 Trump's legacy for the United States 6:38 The errors analysts make 8:32 US vs the illiberal virus: past vs present 12:15 From Venezuela to Greenland: the changing liberal order 21:50 What oppositions in Iran and Venezuela can expect 27:00 A new colonial order? 31:55 European liberal democracies today 41:19 The enemy within Europe 44:55 Mamdani's victory explained 49:45 What Meloni really thinks 52:00 What we can do to defend democracy 52:27 ConclusionsAuthor and host: Ivan ScalfarottoEditor and social media: Ludovica TaurisanoGraphic designer: Paola De BartoloVisual identity: Martina SanturriSound designer: Enrico Cabua
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Trailer
Budapest is a podcast about the crisis of liberal democracy. Why it happens. How we fight back.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Democracy is under siege — not just in Hungary, but across the world.Budapest is where the cracks show first, and where people fight back.Every other week, Ivan Scalfarotto sits down with activists, dissidents, scholars, and political leaders to understand why democracies slide into authoritarianism — and how they can be defended.With reason, not rage.Author and host: Ivan ScalfarottoEditor and social media: LudovicaTaurisanoGraphic designer: Paola De BartoloVisual identity: Martina SanturriSound designer: Enrico Cabua
HOSTED BY
Ivan Scalfarotto
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