In the video, Orban gives Norris a warm welcome.

“I’ve read so much about you that I feel like we’ve already met,” Norris says.

“Ninety percent of the comments on me is negative,” Orban later tells the American. “The liberals hate me.”

“You’re like Trump?” Norris asks.

“A little bit more than that!” the Hungarian responds, prompting Norris to laugh.

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Norris was visiting Hungary at the invitation of Hungarian Baptist Aid, a charity that runs an annual event at Christmastime. According to reports in the Hungarian media, it was his first time in the country, but he has something of a reputation there: In 2006, he became an early front-runner in an online poll to name a new bridge in Budapest.

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Besides his tough-guy meme status, Norris is also a political conservative who endorsed Donald Trump in the 2016 U.S. election and who has voiced his support for foreign leaders such as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Orban, meanwhile, is one of the European Union’s staunchest conservative figures. He has courted controversy with moves against Hungary’s press and the European Union, and found allies in figures such as Russian President Vladimir Putin, former Trump strategist Stephen K. Bannon, and a number of far-right movements across Europe.

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“I’m a street fighter, basically,” the Oxford-educated Orban tells Norris at one point in his video.

In the past, U.S. administrations have kept the Hungarian leader at arm’s length — neither presidents George W. Bush nor Barack Obama invited him to the White House — but the Trump administration has taken a more forgiving stance. David Cornstein, Trump’s new ambassador to Budapest, has called for a new strategy of engagement with Orban.

In his video with Norris, the Hungarian leader takes the American tough guy to see the “toughest guys” in Hungary’s counterterrorism unit. Norris is impressed. “I have seen training all over the world, and this is the best demonstration — the best I’ve seen,” he tells Orban.