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What Did Hungarian President Sulyok Ask the Venice Commission? His Full Appeal Revealed

The 22-page filing says the amendment would end his mandate early and could violate rule-of-law, legal certainty and separation-of-powers standards.

  • On Monday, the Presidential Office published President Sulyok's 22-page submission to the Venice Commission, questioning whether the proposed 17th amendment to Hungary's Fundamental Law complies with European constitutional principles.
  • Prime Minister Magyar's government submitted the 17th amendment over the weekend, proposing to terminate President Sulyok's mandate and introduce a 70-year age limit for Constitutional Court judges, immediately ending mandates of several sitting judges including former Chief Prosecutor Polt.
  • Sulyok argues the attempt to remove him relies on political considerations—such as "systemic change" or "unworthiness"—rather than constitutional grounds, noting that presidents have limited legal responsibility and cannot be removed without violating the Fundamental Law.
  • Despite a recent visit to Budapest by a Venice Commission delegation, the government decided to fast-track parliamentary consideration of the constitutional amendment without committing to wait for the advisory body's opinion.
  • The submission warns that personalized legislation threatening the rule of law and the separation of powers represents a serious challenge to constitutional democracy, following a transparency dispute resolved by the National Authority for Data Protection and Freedom of Information.
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13 Articles

Lean Left

The Sándor Presidential Palace in Hungary announced the issues that President Tamas Suljok addressed to the Venice Commission, Telex reported.

·Belgrade, Serbia
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Lean Left

The 22-page document is free for anyone to browse.

·Hungary
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Lean Left

Given "the high importance of the presidential initiative and the increased public interest."

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Right

EXCLUSIVE MAINTENANCE. It was at the Sándor Palace, its official residence in Budapest, that the Hungarian president, Tamás Sulyok, 70, received current values to expose the dispute against the new Prime Minister, Péter Magyar. The tomber of Viktor Orbán appointed the eminent lawyer to resign during his term of office; he was elected in 2024 for five years. This former president of the Hungarian Constitutional Council denounces a "serious" and "…

·Paris, France
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Index broke the news in Budapest, Hungary on Monday, July 6, 2026.
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