A Czech MP, Jindřich Rajchl of the PRO party, has proposed a law requiring NGOs that receive foreign funding to register publicly, sparking a heated political debate over national sovereignty and external influence in public life. The proposed legislation would obligate organizations with foreign financial support or ties to disclose their funding sources in a public register, a move Rajchl frames as a measure of transparency for citizens.
Rajchl has defended the proposal by emphasizing that it is modeled on the U.S. Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), countering critics who claim it resembles Russian or Hungarian laws. His argument is that if NGOs participate in political, media, or social debates while funded from abroad, the public has a right to know who is behind them.
Critics warn that the law could represent an authoritarian drift and an attack on civil society, echoing concerns raised in Hungary and Russia. Draft details indicate the creation of a register under the Ministry of Justice, requiring NGOs to declare funding sources, foreign contacts, and structural information, with noncompliance potentially resulting in heavy financial penalties.
The proposal reflects a broader regional trend in Central Europe, where governments are increasingly concerned about NGOs acting as channels for external ideological or geopolitical influence. Supporters argue that these organizations often operate with political weight that exceeds their declared domestic mandate, influencing public discourse without sufficient transparency.
The European dimension complicates the issue further. Similar legislation in Hungary led to conflicts with EU institutions, and Georgia faced EU pressure over its own foreign influence law, affecting its EU accession prospects. The debate in the Czech Republic thus represents not only a legal matter but also a political and cultural clash: one side advocating for a liberal democracy supported by civil society, even with foreign funding, and the other asserting that some NGOs have become transnational instruments closer to Brussels than to national citizens.







