WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has never shied away from rubbing shoulders with leaders more typically kept at a distance by the West, and his Oval Office meeting Monday with Hungary’s far right-leaning prime minister was only the latest example of his engagement with strongmen.
Like Trump, Prime Minister Viktor Orban has espoused hard-line anti-migration rhetoric. The president described his guest this way: “Probably, like me, a little bit controversial, but that’s OK. That’s OK. You’ve done a good job and you’ve kept your country safe.”
Trump’s presidency has been marked by decisions that strain longtime U.S. alliances. He has refused to be confined to engaging only with traditional power players in the West. Orban has been accused of dismantling democratic institutions in his country.
A top Democrat, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, called the meeting with Orban “a betrayal to American values abroad” and said Trump “clearly has a dangerous affinity for authoritarian figures over our democratic allies.”