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Call between POLITICO journalist and EU official was intercepted and published online https://www.politico.eu/article/politico-journalist-call-intercept-published-hacking-security-review-hungary-ukraine/
27/03/2026 08:01:57
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politico.eu – POLITICO
March 25, 2026 1:48 am CET
By Zoya Sheftalovich

“Our internal reviews have found no evidence that any devices, networks or systems have been compromised,” POLITICO says in email to staff.

BRUSSELS ― POLITICO launched a security review after a private telephone conversation between one of its reporters and an EU official about issues connected to Hungary and Ukraine was apparently intercepted and the recording published online.

The nine-minute audio clip, from a call that took place on March 3, was uploaded to YouTube on March 16. It has been listened to 5,100 times, according to YouTube data.

“Our internal reviews have found no evidence that any devices, networks or systems have been compromised,” Kate Day, POLITICO’s senior executive editor in Europe, and Carrie Budoff Brown, POLITICO’s executive editor and executive vice president, said in an email to employees on Wednesday.

“We will not be intimidated by an apparent attempt to interfere with independent reporting — nor deterred from the important work we do,” they wrote. “We have always been and will remain vigilant in protecting our sources, supporting the work of our journalists, and maintaining the accuracy of our independent, nonpartisan reporting.”

The issue comes at a time when leaks of confidential EU information are in the spotlight ahead of the Hungarian general election on April 12. In a report on Saturday, the Washington Post said that Viktor Orbán’s government maintained close contacts with Moscow throughout the war in Ukraine, and Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó used breaks during meetings with other member countries to update his Russian counterpart.

A spokesperson for the EU institution where the official works declined to comment on “tapes produced by unknown and anonymous actors.” POLITICO is not identifying the EU official because the call wasn’t on the record.

POLITICO has not been able to determine how the recording may have been obtained and who was responsible for posting it to YouTube.

‘Chilling message’
Several Slovak and Hungarian news websites wrote articles about the recording and published partial transcripts.

“Hacking and the disclosure of journalists’ materials strike at the heart of press freedom and the protections we must be able to rely on as reporters,” said President of the International Press Association in Brussels Dafydd ab Iago. “This is illegal under Belgian law, and it sends a chilling message not only to journalists in Brussels but also to our sources here … The harder question is how to pursue those state actors, whether operating from within the EU or from a third country like Russia.”

On Monday, the Orbán-aligned Hungarian newspaper Mandiner — one of the first outlets that wrote about the conversation — published a separate exchange between independent Hungarian journalist Szabolcs Panyi and a contact. The material was received via a “mysterious email” from an individual identifying himself as “the fourth branch of power,” according to the article’s author.

“We have important stories to tell and work to do and remain focused on maintaining the rigor, independence and purpose that our audience expects from us,” Day and Budoff Brown said in their email.

politico.eu EN 2026 Ukraine Espionage Orbán Missions Drones Pipelines Data Elections Viktor Russia Playbook Security Hungary Services Oil Germany Spying Intelligence Media
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