Political Earthquake in Hungary: Péter Magyar's Triumph Shakes Orbán's Reign and Reshapes Europe

Published 2 days ago2 minute read
Pelumi Ilesanmi
Pelumi Ilesanmi
Political Earthquake in Hungary: Péter Magyar's Triumph Shakes Orbán's Reign and Reshapes Europe

Hungary has experienced a political earthquake, as Péter Magyar and his newly formed Tisza party delivered a crushing election defeat to Viktor Orbán, ending his 16-year rule and dismantling the entrenched system built by the long-serving prime minister. With a record turnout of 77%, Magyar's party secured a landslide victory, projected to achieve a two-thirds constitutional majority, granting him significant authority to unravel Orbán's far-reaching constitutional reforms and exert control over government, the judiciary, and the media.

Orbán, a hard-right, anti-EU leader, had maintained an iron grip on Hungary, cultivating close ties with Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin. He was often seen as Trump's closest ally in Europe, embodying a nationalist, Russia-friendly stance, and was admired by the global hard-right. His premiership was marked by a move towards authoritarianism, including crackdowns on minority rights and media freedoms, subversion of institutions, and allegations of siphoning money to allied business elites. Orbán consistently blocked EU funding for Ukraine and engaged in actions that put significant strain on Hungary's relationship with the European Union.

Just days before the election, US Vice President JD Vance traveled to Budapest to campaign for Orbán, praising him as a defender of national sovereignty and Western civilization. Vance, who even took a phone call from Trump voicing support for Orbán during a rally, urged Hungarians to re-elect the premier. However, this intervention proved unsuccessful, as Orbán's Fidesz party lost by a greater margin of 15 points, securing only 55 seats compared to Magyar's 138.

Péter Magyar, a 45-year-old lawyer and former diplomat, emerged as an unlikely challenger. Once an insider within Orbán's Fidesz party and married to his former Justice Minister, Judit Varga, Magyar turned whistleblower after a 2024 child abuse pardon scandal. He built the Tisza movement from scratch, attracting voters with an anti-corruption platform, vows to dismantle state insider networks, rebuild public services, and hold the ruling elite accountable. By adopting patriotic and conservative-populist rhetoric, he successfully drew in rural voters and centered his campaign on the

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