urka's group denounces this balanced approach. As a consequence, Jozsef Antall, Hungarian Prime Minister and leader of the Hungarian Democratic Forum, attempted to remove the responsible ministers. The ministers refused to resign, and Antall encountered constitutional roadblocks that prevented the removal of the ministers. Csurka, the fascist leader, has demand that the ministers be removed from their offices by force (Kenez, 1992, p. 8).One troublesome issue concerns the motivation for the Hungarian Democratic Forum to keep Csurka's group within the governing CenterRight coalition. The general assessment is that Csurka's ideas appeal to a significantlysized faction within the coalition (Kenez, 1992, p. 8). Csurka thinks this support is in the 70 to 80 percent range (Husarska, 1992, p. 10). In January 1993, however, Antall defeated Csurka for the leadership of the Centerright coalition (Steady, 1993, p. 48).Both Csurka and Antall frequently refer to a Hungarian nation of 15 million persons. Hungary's population is only 10 million. Csurka and Antall, however, include the five million Hungarians residing in neighboring nations who were displaced from Hungary by the provisions of the Trianon Peace Treaty in 1920, as action that reaffirmed by the Yalta Agreement in 1945 (Husarska, 1992, p. 10). Both Antall and Csurka note that the Yalta Agreement expires in 1995, and echo Hitler's call for lebensraum for Germans in the 1930s by demanding living space for Hungarians in the late1990s (Husarska, 1992, p. 10).Antall lost the prime ministership in Hungary in early1994; however, Csurka did not succeed him in that office (Ingram, 1994, p. 8). The caretaker prime minister is Peter Boross, an open admirer of Hungary's fascist prime minister from 1920 through 1944, Nicholas Horthy (Ingram, 1994, p. 8).A valid issue is how the Centerright coalition government in contemporary Hungary, along with...