The Danube Institute is a conservative think tank founded in 2013 and based in Budapest, Hungary.[1] The institute is financed through the Batthyány Foundation (BLA)[2] and receives Hungarian state funding.[3] According to its mission statement, the Danube Institute is dedicated to "a respectful conservatism in cultural, religious, and social life, the broad classical liberal tradition in economics, and a realistic Atlanticism in national security policy."[1]
The institute's president is British John O'Sullivan. Central European politicians associated with the Danube Institute include János Martonyi and Ryszard Legutko.[4] Fellows as of 2023 include religious movements researcher Jeffrey Kaplan, political philosopher Ofir Haivry, conservative author Rod Dreher, historian of Christian political thought David Lloyd Dusenbury, and sociologist Eric Hendriks-Kim. Research director is political scientist David Martin Jones.[5]
In 2019, a video of remarks made by Tim Montgomerie at a meeting hosted by the Danube Institute was published, creating a controversy regarding his views on the Hungarian government.[6] Other politicians who have spoken at Danube Institute meetings include the Australian politicians Tony Abbott and Kevin Andrews, and Václav Klaus, the former minister of finance of Czechoslovakia and then prime minister and president of the Czech Republic.[7] In 2021, the French politician Éric Zemmour gave an interview to the institute.[8]