Protecting religious minorities, journalists, civil society, and sensitive personal data should be part of Hungary’s Article 7 recovery plan, which requires new leadership at NAIH. Hungary’s democratic renewal cannot stop at courts, corruption, media freedom, and EU funds. If Prime Minister Péter Magyar’s new administration wants to restore the rule of law, it must rebuild trust in state bodies tasked with protecting citizens from abuse, including the National Authority for Data Protection and Freedom of Information (NAIH), led by Attila Péterfalvi since 2012. From spyware and political-data misuse to freedom-of-information failures, biometric surveillance, and disproportionate actions affecting minority communities, Hungary needs a privacy watchdog with the courage and credibility to defend fundamental rights.
A democratic reset must reach institutions that failed to protect citizens, creating expectations in Brussels, Strasbourg, Geneva, and Budapest. After years of being treated as one of the European Union’s central rule-of-law problems, Prime Minister Péter Magyar’s government has promised to restore democratic standards, rebuild institutional independence, and reopen constructive relations with the EU. This promise must be tested not only in the visible arenas of constitutional reform, judicial independence, media freedom, and anti-corruption policy but also in the quieter machinery of the state: authorities, regulators, and watchdogs meant to protect citizens from abuse when political power expanded.
One such institution is Hungary’s National Authority for Data Protection and Freedom of Information (NAIH). Formally tasked with protecting personal data protection and freedom of information, the authority’s credibility is now under review as part of Hungary’s rule-of-law reset. This is not a technical issue; it’s central to modern democracy. A privacy and freedom-of-information authority should protect citizens when the state collects personal data, political actors build databases, journalists face surveillance, public authorities refuse transparency, biometric technologies expand, and vulnerable communities face disproportionate administrative power.
In a democratic transition, changing ministers is insufficient. A state governed by rule of law must assess if institutions meant to restrain power did so. If they failed, their leadership must be reviewed and possibly renewed.
The European Union’s Article 7 procedure concerning Hungary remains open. Article 7 should not be treated as ceremonial; it should become a roadmap for genuine repair. Hungarian civil-society organizations make this point, warning that positive commitments by the new government should not be confused with completed reform. Implementation, not rhetoric, will determine if Hungary has truly moved beyond practices that caused European concern.
Article 7 involves more than judicial appointments, electoral laws, media capture, or corruption. Article 2 of the Treaty on European Union protects human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law, and human rights, including minority rights. Protecting privacy, access to information, freedom of expression, association, and religion or belief all belong in this framework.
Hungary’s Article 7 recovery plan should review authorities handling sensitive data, public transparency, surveillance-related complaints, and enforcement actions affecting civil society and minority communities, with NAIH central to that review.
According to NAIH’s official description, the institution monitors and promotes the enforcement of personal data protection and access to public-interest data. Its president is appointed by the President of the Republic on the Prime Minister’s proposal for a nine-year term, with one reappointment possible. The current president, Dr. Attila Péterfalvi, has led NAIH since 2012.
Institutional independence is vital. A data-protection authority must not become a government arm. But independence must not mean unaccountability. When an authority receives repeated criticism for weak responses to surveillance, secrecy, political-data abuse, biometric expansion, and disproportionate enforcement, the new administration must address the issue.
A previous analysis argued that Hungary’s privacy watchdog needs a reset, suggesting that Péterfalvi should not continue to lead. Péterfalvi represents institutional continuity when Hungary needs renewal.
Leadership change at NAIH doesn’t rest on one controversy but on lost confidence. NAIH is not an ordinary regulator. It should stand between citizens and power abuses. It should ask hard questions when the state collects personal data, when political campaigns use information from public services, when journalists are surveilled, when documents are withheld, when facial-recognition systems expand, or when sensitive community records face irreversible administrative action.
Under Péterfalvi, NAIH repeatedly failed to become Hungary’s visible democratic shield. The Pegasus spyware affair exemplifies this failure. After allegations of journalists and public figures targeted with invasive technology, NAIH’s investigation found no proof Pegasus was used beyond legal purposes. But the authority’s conclusion did not end public concern. Media-freedom and human-rights organizations warned that spyware surveillance chilled journalistic work, endangered source protection, and deepened fear around independent reporting.
The issue wasn’t just the legal conclusion but the absence of public confidence. A worthy privacy authority in a democratic state should demand transparency, rigorous safeguards,














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