Based on primary sources in Hungarian, German and English, the articles analyzed current developments in Hungary for the nonspecialist reader from a historian's perspective.
The blog also occasionally included articles written by guest scholars such as Kim Lane Scheppele,[13] Johanna Laakso,[14] Charles Gati[15] and Randolph L.
[4][3] Eva S. Balogh often wrote entries highly critical of the current government in power in Hungary, led by Viktor Orbán.
[18] Balogh was a regular guest on ATV television programmes[19][20] and published opinion pieces in Népszava,[21][22][23] a social-democratic newspaper.
In November 2009, she gave a lecture for CIA officials at Langley, Virginia, where she characterized the imminent right-wing Fidesz victory in the 2010 Hungarian parliamentary election as a possible fascist breakthrough.