HUngary elections – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Mon, 13 Apr 2026 20:35:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png HUngary elections – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Hungary for change: On Victor Orban’s ouster https://artifex.news/article70858929-ece/ Mon, 13 Apr 2026 20:35:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70858929-ece/ Read More “Hungary for change: On Victor Orban’s ouster” »

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The voter’s verdict in Hungary, that ousted Victor Orban, Hungary’s Christian-nationalist, populist and hard-right Prime Minister with a record 20 years in power (1998-2002 and 2010-2026) and four previous consecutive electoral wins, is unambiguous. According to the latest results, opposition leader Peter Magyar’s Tisza party has won about 138 seats, to Mr. Orban’s Fidesz party’s 55. The massive two-thirds majority in the Hungarian parliament is enough to help Mr. Magyar overturn many of the Orban-era shifts on education and health, judicial independence, and the controversial NER (Nemzeti Együttműködés Rendszere) or National Cooperation System that the opposition said had led to an economic downturn, widespread corruption and crony capitalism, as well as an anti-European Union stance. Mr. Magyar, who was a Fidesz party leader until just two years ago when he quit the ruling party in protest of its policies and set up his own political movement, is unlikely to reverse Mr. Orban’s anti-immigrant policies, however. Ahead of the polls, Victor Orban was endorsed by three powerful leaders, all seen as aggressors in recent conflicts — U.S. President Donald Trump, who even sent Vice-President J.D. Vance to address a public rally with Mr. Orban in Budapest last week; Russian President Vladimir Putin; and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whom Mr. Orban supported unequivocally. Hungary actually quit the International Criminal Court after it issued a warrant against the Israeli Prime Minister for war crimes. It remains to be seen whether post-Orban Hungary turns its course on the wars in Iran, Ukraine or Gaza.

Most significantly for the world, that saw the rise of many populist leaders through elections in the 2010s, Hungary’s election verdict denotes that voters worldwide may be tiring of the hard-right, anti-pluralistic, anti-immigrant and xenophobic rhetoric they favoured. Similar outcomes have been seen in elections in Canada, Australia, the Netherlands, the U.K. and Poland. Such trends also provide a check to the authoritarian single-party rule that a whole range of leaders have tried to implement using illiberal policies, politically motivated cases against the opposition, the denigration of democratic institutions and a clampdown on free speech. Mr. Magyar has his work cut out if he aims to reverse these policies in Hungary. The real test of a democratic leader is not just winning elections, but in pursuing inclusive policies, representational of the entire population and providing accountability for their actions, long after forming the government.



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Orban concedes ‘painful’ defeat to conservative Magyar in Hungary polls https://artifex.news/article70855285-ece/ Sun, 12 Apr 2026 20:43:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70855285-ece/ Read More “Orban concedes ‘painful’ defeat to conservative Magyar in Hungary polls” »

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Peter Magyar, leader of the opposition Tisza speaks during a press conference, on the day of the parliamentary election, in Budapest, Hungary, April 12, 2026.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Nationalist Viktor Orban, who has ruled Hungary for 16 years, on Sunday (April 12, 2026) conceded defeat to conservative Peter Magyar in parliamentary elections.

With votes in almost 67% of precincts counted, Mr. Magyar’s party stood to have gained 137 seats, or more than two-thirds of all 199 parliamentary seats, according to official election results.



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U.S. Vice President Vance visits Hungary to boost Orban ahead of pivotal election https://artifex.news/article70832986-ece/ Tue, 07 Apr 2026 05:29:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70832986-ece/ Read More “U.S. Vice President Vance visits Hungary to boost Orban ahead of pivotal election” »

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 U.S. Vice President ​J.D. Vance will travel to Hungary on Tuesday on a mission to boost the electoral campaign of the country’s nationalist Prime Minister ‌Viktor Orban, who faces the toughest re-election bid of his political career.

During the two-day visit, coming ​just days before the April 12 parliamentary elections, Mr. Vance will meet with Mr. Orban and attend a ⁠campaign rally with him, according to Hungarian government sources.

“I’m looking forward to seeing my good friend Viktor, and we’ll talk about any number of things related to the US-Hungary relationship,” Mr. Vance told reporters before departing Washington, adding relations with Europe and Ukraine will be ‌discussed.

The rare in-person gesture of support for Mr. Orban by a senior U.S. official is the latest example of President Donald Trump’s efforts to prop up like-minded right-wing leaders, including in Argentina and Japan.

Opinion ‌polls show Mr. Orban, who Mr. Trump has already publicly endorsed and praised as “a truly strong and powerful leader,” and ‌his ⁠Fidesz party face the most challenging election since returning to power in 2010. In most independent ⁠surveys, they trail the center-right Tisza party, led by Peter Magyar.

Mr. Orban’s self-described “illiberal democracy” mirrors key themes of Trump-era America: harsh anti-immigration policies, disdain for liberal norms, hostility toward global institutions, and attacks on the media, universities and nonprofit groups. He was the first European leader to endorse Mr. Trump ​during his 2016 presidential bid.

“JD Vance’s visit is not ‌routine diplomacy but a clear endorsement of Viktor Orban ahead of the toughest election of his life,” said Asli Aydintasbas, visiting fellow at The Brookings Institution think tank.

“For the Trump administration, Orban is not just a fellow conservative but a central figure in efforts to establish an illiberal bloc inside Europe. If Orban falls, the ‌movement would suffer,” Mr. Aydintasbas said.

Mr. Orban has long been at loggerheads with the European Union over a range of ​issues, including Ukraine. He has maintained cordial ties with Moscow, refuses to send weapons to Ukraine, and says Kyiv can never join the EU.

On a trip to Hungary in February, ⁠U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the Trump administration was focused on Mr. Orban’s success, making clear that the continuation of robust bilateral ties with Budapest was contingent on Mr. Orban’s re-election. He even suggested the U.S. could provide financial assistance, though he ‌did not elaborate.

Far right souring on Trump

Mr. Trump’s “America First” agenda increasingly looks like “America Alone” to allies and adversaries alike, as military campaigns and a deepening rift with Europe mark the first 15 months of his second term.

Now, Europe’s far-right and populist movements are souring on the Republican president despite shared positions on immigration and climate change. Some of their leaders have pushed back against his attempts to acquire Greenland from Denmark and his erratic tariff policy.

Political analysts say U.S. support for Mr. Orban, including Mr. Vance’s trip, may not be enough to sway voters, as domestic issues such as the cost ‌of living dominate the election.

“One wonders whether Vance’s visit will boost or set back Orban’s chances,” said Stephen Wertheim, historian and ​senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

“Orban positions himself as a bastion of geopolitical stability. Back in Washington, however, Vance’s administration is waging a war on Iran that has predictably destabilized ⁠the Middle East and damaged European economies. More and more, ‘America First’ isn’t playing well with European nationalism.”

The trip briefly takes Mr. ⁠Vance out of Washington, where Mr. Trump and his top aides are grappling with how to wrap up the war on Iran, now in its sixth week with no clear off-ramp in sight. The conflict ‌has driven up gas prices, dragged down Trump’s approval ratings and intensified Republican anxiety about November’s midterm elections.

Mr. Vance, an isolationist who has advocated against Washington’s entanglements in foreign wars, has played a role in the indirect communications ​with Iran to end the war. He was among a handful of Mr. Trump aides who initially expressed caution about the conflict.

Published – April 07, 2026 10:59 am IST



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