TNAG-2021-FCO40-2883-Relations-between-Hong-Kong-and-Hungary-1990 — Page 57

FCO40 Hong Kong Department Records 聯邦事務部香港部檔案 All

The Maru en

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ENH 026

RECORD OF A CALL BY MR LASZLO KOVACS, ASTA SECRETARY

HUNGARIAN MFA ON MR TAIT ON 28 MARCH 1990 AT 1500

Present:

Mr Kovacs, State Secretary,

Hungarian MFA

Mr Brodi, Minister, Hungarian

Embassy

Mr Tait

m

Mr Noble, EED

1.

After opening courtesies Mr Kovacs ran through the options open to him now following the elections. He might

possibly stay in the Foreign Service as an Ambassador; he could become involved in party politics by being elected to parliament from the HSP's national list; or he could go into

research or business. It was not surprising that the HSP

had faired badly in the elections. The party was tied to

the last 40 years of Hungarian history and was blamed for all mistakes of that period. The opposition had exploited this one off opportunity for all it was worth. The Social

Democratic Party and its leader Anna Petrasovits had conducted a poor electoral campaign.

In an attempt to

distance themselves from the HSP and from Hungary's

socialist past, they had advocated liberal democratic and not social democratic values, thus confusing themselves with

the Association of Free Democrats. There would be a natural

gap left in the political spectrum to be filled by a social

democratic party and Kovac believed that the HSP would fill this gap on the moderate left. Mr Tait agreed that the HSP was probably heading for a wintry period, Socialism was unpopular now in Eastern Europe but the HSPS prospects would improve as Hungary settled down to multi-party democracy.

JBDAAE/1

51

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