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May 25, 2026
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Romania’s Culture Minister of Hungarian Origin: “I Fuck the Romanian State’s Interest, I Am Hungarian”

Romania’s interim Culture Minister, András István Demeter, is at the centre of a major political scandal after an audio recording emerged in which he allegedly insults Romania’s national interest in obscene terms and invokes his Hungarian ethnicity.

The phrase is brutal, politically explosive and almost impossible to defend: “I f*** the national interest, because I am Hungarian.”

That is not a private joke from an unknown extremist. It is the alleged statement of Romania’s acting Culture Minister, the man temporarily responsible for the country’s culture, heritage and symbolic identity.

The Recording That Shook the Culture Ministry

According to Romanian media, the recording captures Demeter speaking during a discussion with ministry employees and recalling a 2012 episode connected to the acquisition of Radio Chișinău by Radio România.

In the recording, Demeter allegedly says that if he had become angry, he could have told the Russians about the radio station and sold it for EUR 5 million, leaving the Romanian state without the alleged damage in the prosecutors’ case and even “on profit.”

Then comes the sentence that turned the case into a national scandal.

“I f*** the national interest, because I am Hungarian,” Demeter is reported as saying in the recording.

For a normal politician, this would already be damaging. For a Culture Minister, it is politically radioactive.

UDMR Leader Demands His Resignation

The scandal became even more serious after Csoma Botond, spokesperson of UDMR and leader of the party’s deputies in Parliament, publicly called for Demeter’s resignation.

This is not a minor detail. Demeter comes from the Hungarian minority political ecosystem, and the sharpest institutional reaction came from inside that same political area.

Csoma said UDMR distances itself from both the vulgar language and the content of the statements attributed to Demeter. He described them as incompatible with the responsibility of public office and harmful to public trust in state institutions.

He also said that resignation would be the natural and responsible gesture.

In plain terms, UDMR has understood the political danger: if Demeter stays in office, the scandal no longer belongs only to him. It becomes a stain on the party that placed and defended such officials in the Romanian state.

“I Am Hungarian” Becomes the Most Toxic Line in Romanian Politics

Hungary

The most dangerous part of the recording is not only the obscene language. Romanian politics is full of vulgarity, cynicism and arrogance.

The real problem is the structure of the alleged statement: contempt for the Romanian national interest, followed immediately by an ethnic explanation.

“I am Hungarian” is not presented as a neutral biographical fact in that sentence. It appears to be the reason why Romania’s national interest can be dismissed.

That is why the case is so toxic. It risks feeding exactly the kind of ethnic resentment that UDMR usually says it wants to avoid.

Csoma Botond also warned that the scandal should not be turned into collective blame against the Hungarian community in Romania. That distinction is necessary. The controversy concerns one official and his alleged conduct, not an entire ethnic minority.

But it is also true that the line is politically disastrous precisely because it was allegedly spoken by a Hungarian minority official holding a Romanian government position.

Hungarian PM

During his first speech after winning the elections, the current Hungarian PM, Péter Magyar, used an irredentist expression by referring to Romania’s territory as Partium. This is an expression used by Hungarian nationalists and irredentists while referring to Romania’s Western counties.

AUR Seizes the Scandal

AUR deputy Mihail Neamțu, president of the Culture Committee in the Chamber of Deputies, also demanded Demeter’s resignation.

His reaction was predictable but effective. AUR framed the scandal as a direct insult to the Romanian people and to Romania’s national dignity.

The party now has a perfect political weapon: a Culture Minister allegedly heard insulting the national interest while saying he is Hungarian.

For AUR, this is not just another government scandal. It is campaign material. It speaks directly to themes of sovereignty, national humiliation, minority privilege and the weakness of the Romanian state.

Demeter’s Defence Looks Confused

Demeter’s defence has not helped him much.

Romanian media reported that he initially did not deny the recording’s existence, saying it concerned the prosecutors’ case and that he had nothing to deny. He argued that the wider context was the acquisition of Radio Chișinău and the risk that the station could fall under Russian influence.

He also said that, although he is Hungarian, a Romanian citizen of Hungarian ethnicity, he had served Romania’s interest.

Later, however, he suggested that the recording could have been edited or even fabricated.

That shift is politically weak. Either the recording is real and needs context, or it is fake and must be formally challenged. Trying both lines at once makes the defence look improvised.

Why This Is Not Just Another Political Gaffe

This scandal matters because it involves the Ministry of Culture.

A transport minister can survive technical incompetence. A finance minister can survive budget fights. A culture minister cannot easily survive being associated with contempt for the national interest.

The office itself is symbolic. It deals with identity, heritage, historical memory and cultural representation. The minister is supposed to speak for the country’s cultural dignity, not be heard allegedly trampling on it.

That is why Demeter’s position is now extremely fragile.

Romania’s Government Has a Clear Choice

The Government can try to bury the scandal under technical explanations, ethnic caution and procedural silence. Or it can admit the obvious: no minister should remain in office after such a recording becomes public, especially when his own political camp says resignation is the responsible gesture.

The issue is no longer only what Demeter meant in 2012, what he says he meant now, or whether the recording was edited.

The issue is whether Romania accepts a Culture Minister publicly associated with the phrase: “I f*** the national interest, because I am Hungarian.”

For any serious government, the answer should be simple.

Photo source: Romania’s Ministry of Culture

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