The billionaire philanthropist has often been accused by hardliner Orban over the past two years of interfering in European Union affairs by backing open borders and pro-refugee policies and organisations.
"European policy is distorted... The essence of Europe is not in Brussels but in the member states and if the institutions don't respect the member states, that is depressing," he said in an interview on public radio.
The strongman's latest attack came after the European Parliament on Wednesday passed a resolution calling on the European Commission to trigger a legal procedure known as Article Seven of the EU treaty.
However, the EU would need unanimity of member states to establish that a violation has taken place and ally Poland would likely block it.
In addition, the European Commission, the executive of the 28-nation EU, is advocating more dialogue with Budapest to iron out disagreements, saying last month it saw no "systemic threat" to the rule of law in Hungary.
Nonetheless, Orban took aim at the parliamentary resolution, saying on public radio it was "the mark of a mistaken policy."
It was backed by 68 lawmakers from the European People's Party (EPP) group, which includes Orban's right-wing Fidesz party.
Orban said the real reason behind the resolution was the issue of migration.
Budapest and Brussels have been at odds over Hungary's hardline stance on immigration, described as a "Trojan horse of terrorism" by Orban.
The prime minister accused Soros of masterminding an "intellectual, political, and economic interest group in Europe" who want to flood the continent with hundreds of thousands of migrants.
Last month, the European Commission launched legal action against Hungary over a law that could shut the prestigious Soros-founded Central European University in Budapest.
It has also threatened to launch infringement procedures in June against Hungary and Poland over their refusal to take their share of migrants as part of an EU plan to distribute asylum-seekers around the bloc members. Infringement procedures could lead to fines.
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