It’s often said that when America sneezes, the rest of the world catches a cold. But for queer people in Central and Eastern Europe, what’s blowing in from Washington feels more like a storm. The return of Donald Trump to global relevance — whether through campaign rallies or backchannel diplomacy — is already echoing across borders. And for LGBTQIA+ communities in places like Hungary, that echo sounds a lot like danger.
"Trump is back, and so is the hate,” says Nikoletta Bogadi, a mother of four from rural Hungary. Her life turned upside down when one child came out as gay, and another as trans. Moving to Budapest offered a sliver of safety, but even the capital is feeling the chill. “We weren’t strong enough before to face the hurricane of protests. Now, with Trump rising again, the winds in Washington are emboldening the worst here.”

Hungary’s parliament recently passed a law to ban Budapest Pride, backed by a constitutional amendment and a growing far-right alliance. Orbán’s government has long borrowed the anti-LGBTQIA+ playbook from U.S. conservatives: family values rhetoric, anti-“gender ideology” campaigns, and media propaganda. With Trump openly aligning himself with such ideologies, it’s no surprise that Orbán and his allies feel bolder than ever.
The effects are deeply personal. Bogadi’s trans son is preparing to leave Hungary for Germany. “He can’t even go to the bank or take an exam without pretending to be someone he’s not,” she says. “It broke my heart when he told me he had to leave.”
Other queer Hungarians, like trans software engineer Nikolett Bernadett Hollosy, are staying put — but with growing anxiety. “There’s a creeping dictatorship here,” she says. “And the world looks away.”
For queer communities across Europe, Trump is not a distant problem. His influence fans the flames of policies that threaten our lives, our bodies, our families. If we want to keep our freedoms, we have to see the connections clearly — and stand together to resist.
Because what happens in America doesn’t stay in America. And what we do in Brussels can still make a difference.
Written by Vasilis Thanopoulos (ANTIVIRUS, Greece)
This article was made possible thanks to ANTIVIRUS and the collaboration between LGBTQIA+ publications across Europe.
KET.brussels is a proud member of the European LGBTQIA Media Association.*
Vous aimerez aussi
-
Homoparentalités ASBL: Supporting LGBTQI+ Families in Belgium
Homoparentalités ASBL is a Brussels-based association for LGBTQI+ parents, future parents, and their children, offering
-
Nous qui parlons: holding feminist space and building a living archive of women’s voices
Once a month at La Tricoterie, in Brussels, a small group gathers in the mezzanine
-
Stonewall Without a Rainbow: Trump’s Rules Just Tore Down Our Flag
The Pride flag has been pulled down from the Stonewall National Monument in New York
-
Criminalising Pride: Hungary Wants to Jail the Man Who Refused to Disappear
In southern Hungary, a queer Roma teacher is facing prison for doing something that should
-
Can We Still Find Love Without Swiping? RTBF’s “La Vraie Vie” Challenges the Dating App Era
In a world where finding love often happens through endless swipes and ghosted chats, RTBF’s
