Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán sought to mobilise support ahead of the European Union elections this summer, and urged his spectators to help him “occupy Brussels.” Orbán’s speech on Friday, coinciding with a national holiday commemorating Hungary’s failed 1848 revolution against Habsburg rule, railed against the EU and compared the bloc to imperial occupiers that have dominated Hungary throughout history. The nationalist leader drew a sharp contrast between his country and the “Western world,” accusing the latter of being a source of rootlessness and destruction. “They start wars, dest…