The speed with which progressive forces have moved to reshape Hungary following Viktor Orbán’s electoral defeat has been laid bare with the submission of an application to launch a dedicated LGBT television channel — a development that would have been unthinkable under Fidesz’s 16-year governance.
An application for a media service called “Rainbow TV” has been filed with Hungary’s National Media and Infocommunications Authority by an as-yet-unnamed entrepreneur. The proposed channel would operate as both a linear broadcast television network and an online streaming platform, running 24-hour programming that includes LGBT history content, cultural and entertainment shows, talk shows, and lifestyle programming. An adults-only content tier for 18+ material is also included in the application.
The timing is impossible to separate from Hungary’s political earthquake. Orbán’s Fidesz party lost its parliamentary majority earlier this month to the liberal-centrist Tisza Party of Péter Magyar, ending a governing era defined in part by the 2021 Child Protection Law — which banned the promotion of homosexuality and gender ideology to minors. The European Court of Justice struck that law down just weeks after Orbán’s defeat, ruling it violated EU fundamental rights. Rainbow TV’s application follows directly in the wake of that ruling.
This is how the ideological transformation of a nation works in practice. Orbán loses an election on a Sunday, the EU court kills his child protection law the following week, and within days someone is filing paperwork to launch an LGBT television channel. Hungary built something genuinely distinct in modern Europe: a government that defended children from age-inappropriate sexual content and called it what it was. That project is now being dismantled in real time, and the speed of the dismantling tells you exactly how much the opposition and their EU allies had prepared for this moment.
