The historic center of Prague was dwarfed on Saturday as a sea of Czech and EU flags signaled a massive rejection of Prime Minister Andrej Babiš. Organized by Milion Chvilek (Million Moments for Democracy), the turnout of 250,000 people represents a significant escalation in civil resistance since Babiš returned to power in December, leading a coalition with right-wing and far-right elements.
The Triple Threat: Media, Defense, and NGOs
The protesters’ grievances are specific and urgent. The Babiš administration has moved to centralize power through three primary channels that critics say mirror the playbooks of Viktor Orbán and Robert Fico.

Plans to change the financing of public television are being viewed as a direct attempt to neuter independent journalism and turn the state broadcaster into a government mouthpiece. Despite the Iran war destabilizing global energy and security, Babiš has slashed the defense budget, leading to a public clash with President Petr Pavel.
NGO Crackdown: New “disclosure rules” for non-governmental organizations are being flagged as a way to silence civil society and human rights watchdogs.
”We Don’t Want to be Hungary”
The sentiment on the ground is one of fear that the Czech Republic is drifting away from Western democratic norms. Protesters like 22-year-old Tomas Chaloupka noted that “freedom and democracy are paramount,” while others carried signs explicitly warning against following the “Slovak path” toward authoritarianism.
A Populist Pivot at the Worst Time
Babiš is playing a high-stakes game. By cutting defense spending while the Middle East is in flames and oil prices have surged 50%, he is signaling a retreat from the NATO-centric security model that President Pavel champions. This isn’t just a local protest, it’s a battle for the soul of Central Europe.
If Babiš succeeds in capturing the media, the Czech Republic could effectively become a “black hole” in the center of the EU, much like Hungary. However, with a quarter of a million people in the streets, the “Million Moments” movement has shown that the Czech public isn’t ready to trade their 1989 hard-won freedoms for populist promises. The question is: will Babiš double down, or will the scale of this dissent force a policy U-turn?
















