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The European Union agreed to open membership talks with Ukraine on Thursday but failed to ratify a €50 million aid package because of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, drawing media perspectives.

For Context: Orbán, the only detractor, held up the membership decision for 8 hours before letting it pass but blocked the aid package.

Fragile Unity: An opinion for Bloomberg (Lean Left bias) said the Orban-less agreement for opening membership talks with Ukraine “is a historic, if symbolic… message to Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump” that Kyiv still has “momentum.” The writer said Orbán’s “antics” will incentivize the EU to find creative short-term solutions, but that long-term European unity “looks fragile” and “Ukraine will need many more historic breakthroughs.”

Orbán Problem: An opinion for Financial Times (Center bias) labeled Ukraine’s attainment of negotiation status a “defeat” for Orbán, and said while Orbán shows no intentions of leaving the EU, the summit was a “further demonstration” of his “isolation.” The writer argued that “the far right is on the rise” and “if the EU cannot solve its Orbán problem, there will be a growing risk of further fragmentation and political paralysis.”

No Friend: An opinion for Washington Examiner (Lean Right bias) said it’s understandable why American conservatives find appeal in Orbán’s domestic policies, but he’s “no friend of America” because “Ukraine's democratic survival and defeat of Russia's invasion represent an important strategic interest for the U.S.” The writer said Washington needs Europe to “do more” for Ukraine so it can redirect resources to “deterring China in the Pacific.”

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Hungarian strongman leader Viktor Orban is said to be a fan of Charles De Gaulle. But unlike the Frenchman’s 1960s European boycott that paralyzed policymaking, Orban’s stage-managed exit from this week’s EU leaders’ summit was a boost rather than a crisis for unity with Ukraine. The risk, though, is of bigger fights to come.

“There’s a man — Viktor Orbán — did anyone ever hear of him?” Donald Trump asked in one of his recent rallies, referring to the Hungarian prime minister. “He’s probably . . . one of the strongest leaders anywhere in the world. He’s the leader of Turkey.”

Trump’s slip of the tongue attracted ridicule, but in a curious way he was right. The Hungarian leader’s ambitions go far beyond ruling a country of 10mn people. Orbán wants to be the leader of a new Europe. And this desire was on full display in Brussels on Thursday night and in the early hours of Friday.