Coca-Cola ads promoting gay tolerance stir furore in Hungary

Coca-Cola ads promoting gay tolerance stir furore in Hungary

by Joseph Anthony
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People take part in the annual Pride festival in Budapest, Hungary July 6

Advertisements by Coca-Cola around a music festival in Hungary that promote gay acceptance have prompted a boycott call from a senior member of the conservative ruling party.

The posters, in tandem with the week-long โ€œLove Revolutionโ€ event starting on Wednesday in Budapest, show gay people and couples smiling with slogans like โ€œzero sugar, zero prejudiceโ€.

That has irked some supporters of Viktor Orbanโ€™s nationalist Fidesz party, which supports a prohibition of same-sex marriage.

On Sunday, Fideszโ€™s deputy speaker Istvan Boldog called for a boycott of Coca-Cola products during its โ€œprovocativeโ€ campaign.

Right-wing news portals echoed his antipathy.

โ€œThe homosexual lobby is laying siege to Budapest, leaving no space to avoid this,โ€ complained one, Pesti Sracok.

Orban, who rails against immigrants, promotes โ€œethnic homogeneityโ€ and seeks to protect Europeโ€™s Christian traditions, opposes equal rights to same-sex couples while also advocating quiet gay-straight co-existence.

Coca-Cola said on Monday the Sziget festival, expected to draw more than half a million people, echoes core principles of the U.S. multinational. โ€œWe believe both hetero- and homosexuals have the right to love the person they want the way they want,โ€ it said in a statement.

โ€˜THEY NEED ENEMIESโ€™

Fidesz stopped short of endorsing Boldogโ€™s boycott call, saying Hungarians were free to choose whether to drink Coke.

Tamas Dombos, an advocate with the Hatter gay rights group, said the government was homophobic but also aware of societyโ€™s growing acceptance of gay lifestyles.

โ€œWe have a feeling they are testing people in this subject,โ€ he told Reuters. โ€œThe entire government propaganda is built on conflict, and they need enemies. After the EU, migrants, NGOs and even the homeless, now it may be LGBTQ people.โ€

โ€œSometimes itโ€™s hard to dissect whether itโ€™s a political strategy or just an inherent real homophobe getting mad at something like Cokeโ€™s campaign.โ€

According to a 2018 Hatter study, nearly two-thirds of Hungarians believe gay people should be free to live as they please, up from less than half in 2002.

Gay rights have caused more of a stir in Poland, where ruling right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party, a Fidesz ally, has launched an anti-gay campaign in an apparent attempt to re-energise its mainly rural base. One conservative magazine distributed โ€œLGBT-free zoneโ€ stickers and some towns have declared themselves โ€œLGBT-freeโ€.

In Hungary, the parliament speaker this year said gay adoption was tantamount to โ€œpaedophilia in a moral senseโ€.

Orban has rarely addressed the issue head on, though in a 2016 interview he said gay people โ€œcan do what they want but cannot get their marriages recognised by the stateโ€ฆ An apple cannot ask to be called a pear.โ€

REUTERS

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