BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) – The head of the European Parliament delegation representing Hungary´s ruling party is being targeted for expulsion from his political group in the European Union legislature after comparing the group’s leader to the gestapo.

Members of the European People´s Party have called for a vote on expelling Tamas Deutsch, the head of the Hungarian delegation to the center-right group.

Deutsch is a founding member of Hungary´s right-wing ruling party, Fidesz, which belongs to the European People’s Party.

In a Monday letter addressed to the leader of the EPP in the European Parliament, Manfred Weber, and delivered to all group members, EU lawmakers referenced their «growing dismay and impatience (with the) increasing radicalization and verbal abuses of certain Fidesz MEPs.»

The signatories demanded that a vote on Deutsch´s expulsion be held at the group´s next meeting on Dec.

9.

Weber, who represents Germany, has been critical of Hungary and Poland´s decision to veto passage of the EU´s next seven-year budget and kostenlose sexanzeigen coronavirus recovery fund, which the two countries oppose due to a so-called rule of law mechanism which would link payment of EU funds to countries´ adherence to democratic standards.

Weber had called the veto «irresponsible,» and said if media freedom and judicial independence were upheld in Hungary, the country’s leaders had no reason to fear the rule of law mechanism.

Deutsch told two Hungarian news outlets last week that Weber´s comments were reminiscent «of the Gestapo and (Hungary´s communist-era secret police) the AVH.»

In the letter demanding a vote on Deutsch´s expulsion, EPP lawmakers called his remarks «shocking and shameful.»

«Comparing our support for the rule of law with Gestapo or Stalinist methods is an insult to all of us in the EPP group,» the letter reads.

Deutsch told pro-government newspaper Magyar Nemzet on Tuesday that the effort to oust him from the EPP was proof that Hungary must «use all means» to prohibit adoption of the rule of law mechanism.

The Hungarian delegation to the European People’s Party also is facing fallout from the news that another senior lawmaker had attended an illegal lockdown party in Brussels.

Fidesz MEP Jozsef Szajer resigned Sunday after police broke up a party that media reports described as a sex orgy.

The EPP suspended Fidesz´s membership in 2019 over concerns that it was eroding the rule of law in Hungary and engaging in anti-Brussels rhetoric.
In a weekend interview with Belgian newspaper De Standaard, Weber said the EPP would have already made a decision on expelling Fidesz from the group were it not for the coronavirus pandemic.

A spokesperson for the EPP confirmed to The Associated Press that Weber had received the letter, and said that it would be up to the EPP´s presidency when to hold a vote on Deutsch´s exclusion.