Central Europe correspondent

It was a big week in Europe for the CPAC, the Conservative Political Action Conference, with major gatherings in Poland and Hungary.
The time is crucial, before the expiration of the presidential election in Poland on Sunday, between CPAC supported nationalist Carol Navy and Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskovski, who is described by CPAC spokesmen as a “battle for Western civilization”.
A traditional place for conservative activists in America, CPAC's visibility rose with Donald Trump back to the White House and his MAGA (Make American Great) movement in undeniable Republic Party control.
“This is not a gathering of the victorious, but of those who have endured,” Hungary's nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban told Budapest in the opening session on Thursday.
Describing President Trump as “Truth Serum”, Orban emphasized his vision for a new Europe, in what he calls the “Patriots Age” based on the nation, the traditional family and its version of Christianity.

To the applause, he and other speakers made fun of the green deal of the European Union and complained of mass immigration and “gender and awakening of madness”.
In the congress hall full of disco music, flashing lights, videos and celebrity hosts, older politicians sometimes seemed blinded by all razzamatazz.
“Europeans do not feel safe in their own cities, homes and countries,” Orban said. “They are unknown in their own homes. This is not integration, it is a replacement of the population.”
It was a topic, voiced by his guests, Alice Wedel of the far -right AFD of Germany and Geert Wilders of the Netherlands for freedom.
It was a movement that wanted to reshape the whole European project with its own brand of conservativeism, throwing away the old liberalism of the EU.
Other speakers included Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico and the leader of the Austrian Freedom Party Herbert Kickl.
Former British Prime Minister Liz Trux was also here, with Australian former Prime Minister Tony Abbot and former Polish and Czech Prime Minister Matesh Moraveec and Andrei Babis, along with a number of influential Republicans and politicians in South America.
There was even a BJP representative of Rajendra Modi in India, Ram Madhav.

In Warsaw on Tuesday, and then in Budapest, the speakers set out the case of what one of them called an “international nationalist movement, a global platform for anti -globalist forces”.
“Unlike CPAC in the United States, it seems that Hungary on CPAC has more intellectual substance. And it also serves as an opportunity – rarely in Europe – for nationalist and populist politicians and activists, to gather and connect with the network,” said the Budapei -based editor of the US conservative editor to the BBC.
“Victor Orban's promise to make the Budapest Intellectual Capital of Disiden European Conservatism has come true.”
Orban likes this “dissident” topic, while the more basic European conservatives such as German Chancellor Friedrich Mertz keep their distance.
In Hungary and Poland, it makes sense that the Trump administration is here to pay the support that Donald Trump received from nationalist leaders in Europe in his victory last November.
“If you choose a leader who will work with President Trump, the Polish people will have a strong ally,” Christy Nobody said, the head of Trump's internal security, told the Warsaw CPAC conference.
“Here you will continue to have a military presence in the US … and you will have equipment that is made by Americans, high quality.”
She did not say what would happen if Carol Naroki did not win on Sunday.
While Maga Movement in Europe – translated by Victor Orban to Mega (Make Europe Great again) – sounds confident, it also withstands failures, most recently with the Liberal Mayor of Bucharest, Nikur Dan, winning Romania Presidential election.
In AlbaniaSally Berish, supported by Magi leader of the Democratic Party, lost the parliamentary elections for this month to the socialist Eddie Rama. Former Trump campaign strategist Chris Labivita has helped Berisha's campaign.
And in Austria Herbert Kickl's hopes of becoming Chancellor were arranged by the formation of a new left-right coalition, which instead chose the Christian Stock of the Austrian People's Party.
The throne even shakes under Victor Orban, hosting the conference in Budapest.
Can his message, so fresh in the ears of his fans in the United States, stood stagnant for the Hungarians?
“If the Navy does not win in Poland, Hungary will be next and Victor Orban will lose power,” warned George Simion, a Romanian nationalist, defeated by Niscor Dan in Warsaw. The next parliamentary elections in Hungary are to come in April next year.
There are cracks in the facade of unity.
Ukraine and Russia remain a source of division. Italian Prime Minister Jorgin Meloni was noticeable of his absence.
And there was bad news this week for Victor Orban, the Hungarian fertility rate fell to 1.28 in April, almost as low as it came to power in 2010, despite the 15 -year incentives for taxes and housing to encourage couples to have more children.
But since the chairs were packed in the Budapest Congress Hall on Friday night, there was a mood for enthusiasm, the eyes were trained in the leak in Poland.