Thursday, April 16, 2026

ANALYSIS

Orban ousted: What Magyar’s victory means for Hungary and the EU

Peter Magyar's landslide victory over Viktor Orban in Sunday’s Hungarian legislative elections marks a seismic shift for Hungary and the EU, but Brussels may need to temper its enthusiasm. On the rule of law, migration and LGBTQ rights, the road ahead is neither straight nor guaranteed.



Issued on:  14/04/2026 
FRANCE24
By:Mehdi BOUZOUINA


Peter Magyar speaks to the media in Budapest, Hungary, Monday, April 13, 2026, after defeating Prime Minister Viktor Orban's party in the country's parliamentary elections. © Denes Erdos, AP

The images from Budapest said it all. Tens of thousands of Hungarians, many in tears, waving flags along the Danube as Peter Magyar declared: "We have freed Hungary." After 16 years, Viktor Orban, the man who turned his country into a template for European "illiberalism", had been swept from power.

With 53.56 percent of the vote and 138 seats out of 199 in parliament, Magyar's Tisza party secured a two-thirds supermajority, the same constitutional lever Orban once used to dismantle checks and balances. Magyar has promised to use it to rebuild them.

For the European Union, Sunday's result was greeted with undisguised relief. "Hungary has chosen Europe," said European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen on X. But the jubilation in Brussels will be getting ahead of the reality on the ground.

"One can be cautiously positive," Ian Bond, director of the Centre for European Reform in London, told FRANCE 24. "But not everything is going to change."

WATCH MORE'Love has triumphed': Hungarian papers react to Orban loss in historic elections

Magyar is a conservative, a former Fidesz insider who broke with Orban in 2024. His Tisza party draws a strikingly mixed crowd: 43 percent of his voters identify as liberal, 22 percent as left-wing, 10 percent as Green, and only 11 percent as right-wing conservative. Keeping that coalition together while delivering on sweeping institutional reform will be a balancing act of its own.

"His first priority is rule of law, and that will keep him very busy," says Denis Cenusa, an associate expert at the Geopolitical Security Studies Centre in Vilnius. "Because it will depend entirely on his ability to revive the Hungarian economy, including by regaining access to EU structural funds."
The corruption mountain

The economy was among the top priorities that drove Hungarians to the polls in record numbers, with a historic turnout of 79.5 percent, the highest since the country adopted democracy at the end of the Cold War.

Prices in Hungary have surged by 57 percent since 2020, the highest increase in the EU, and nearly double the bloc's average of 28 percent. The average monthly salary stands at €1,037, compared with a €2,654 average in the euro area.

Behind those numbers lies a deeper malaise. Hungary ranked last in the EU on Transparency International's 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index, scoring just 40 out of 100, its worst result ever. Its score has dropped 15 points since 2012, the most significant decline of any EU member state.

Magyar’s first announced move after his victory was clear and pointed: Hungary would join the European Public Prosecutor’s Office, the EU’s powerful anti-fraud and anti-corruption body.

It is a promise that resonates, but one that will collide head-on with the institutional architecture Orban spent 16 years constructing. The judiciary, the media, the electoral system and the public procurement networks have been reshaped in Fidesz's image.

READ MOREHow Orban benefits from Hungary's tailor-made election system
Polish warning

Europe has been here before. When Prime Minister Donald Tusk's coalition ousted Poland's PiS government in late 2023, Brussels also celebrated. The lesson, according to Tania Rancho, a researcher in EU fundamental rights law at Paris-Saclay University, is to manage expectations.

"Tusk didn't overturn everything. Not on immigration, not on women's rights," she says. "The Polish precedent shows that a pro-European replacement doesn't automatically mean a progressive one."

The parallel is instructive. Magyar, like Tusk, is pro-EU and anti-corruption. But on the politically charged questions that defined the Orban era, his positions remain largely unknown or deliberately vague.

On LGBTQ rights, for instance, Magyar said almost nothing during the campaign. The EU is currently awaiting a landmark ruling from the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) on Hungary's 2021 anti-LGBTQ law, a piece of legislation that, in the words of the Court's Advocate General, "establishes systematic discrimination" against LGBTQ people. In May 2025, twenty EU member states had already denounced the law as a violation of fundamental freedoms. What Magyar will do if and when the CJEU strikes it down remains to be seen.

WATCH MORE‘Change is feasible’ in Hungary after Magyar victory: FT reporter Marton Dunai

On migration, arguably Orban's most resonant wedge issue, the picture is equally complex. Magyar has nationalist instincts on the topic, says researcher Denis Cenusa, "but he won't make a political brand out of it. That means he'll be more likely to find common ground with Brussels,” as it is moving in a harder direction.

Orban's Hungary was a grotesque extreme of that tendency, deporting asylum seekers at the border while quietly issuing work visas to Asian migrants in the name of economic need. But the underlying logic of "chosen" versus "imposed" migration is one that resonates well beyond Budapest.
Geopolitical ripple effects

For the rest of the EU, Sunday's result removes a persistent irritant from the bloc's decision-making machinery. Orban had used his veto power to block or delay EU aid to Ukraine, sanctions against Russia, and the accession process for Kyiv.

But Bond, the former senior diplomat, urges caution on Ukraine in particular. Magyar, he notes, "still has reservations", as he has opposed sending weapons to Kyiv and remains sceptical of Ukrainian EU membership. "I don't believe in an overnight conversion," Bond says flatly. Magyar reiterated that stance on Monday, saying: "We are talking about a country at war. It is completely out of the question for the European Union to admit a country at war."

WATCH MORE  'Undeterred': Hungarian journalist faces threats, espionage claims from Orban

Cenusa is equally measured on the wider geopolitical significance. "The Orban factor on EU integration was slightly exaggerated," he says. "He was creating problems, but he was not the only one. With or without him, EU integration will proceed."

What does change, he argues, is the symbolic register. The defeat is "a blow to European illiberalism" but it may also, paradoxically, be "an incentive for far-right forces to learn from Orban's mistakes."

Peter Magyar calls on Hungarian president to step down, announces plans for media shake-up in fiery interview

Peter Magyar calls on Hungarian president to step down, announces plans for media shake-up in fiery  interview
Tisza Party leader Peter Magyar with Hungarian President Tamas Sulyok at his office. / Facebook/Tamas SulyokFacebook
By IntelliNews April 16, 2026

Incoming Prime Minister Peter Magyar called on the president, Tamas Sulyok, to resign after the new government is formed, saying otherwise the new majority would seek his removal, Telex.hu reported on April 15.  According to Magyar's account, President Sulyok had told him that he, too, wished to preserve the rule of law and would "consider" his arguments for resignation.

The meeting unwound after Sulyok invited leaders of the Tisza Party, Fidesz and radical-right-wing Our Homeland to outline the parliamentary timeline for the coming weeks. Sulyok formally invited the leader of the Tisza Party to form a government.

Formal talks on forming the new government would take place at the end of the week and the inaugural session is expected in early May, but no later than 30 days after the final results are validated.

This is expected to come on April 18, when votes casts at consulates are counted. The ballots of those voting outside their constituencies will also be added to the results of the respective electoral districts, which according to analysts could still swing mandates in favour of Tisza due to the tight lead there.

After the meeting, Magyar said he had asked Hungary's head of state to preserve what is left of Hungary's rule of law and democracy by voluntarily resigning.

Hungarians voted not just for a change of government but a regime change, and Sulyok was "unworthy and unfit in the eyes of the Hungarian people to embody national unity, uphold the law or serve as a moral compass and role model", citing several high-profile cases where the president remained silent, which included the abuse of children at foster homes, the financial scandal surrounding the foundations of the central bank, and how the executive had weaponised intelligence services for partisan ends against the Tisza Party.

"I told him that if he did not resign voluntarily, we would use the mandate given to us by voters to remove him and every other puppet appointed by the Orban regime from office through constitutional amendments and necessary legal changes."

Sulyok took office in March 2024, after the resignation of Katalin Novák, who was forced to step down after Prime Minister Viktor Orban signed off on a pardon for the deputy head of the Bicske youth home, who covered up the paedophilic abuse carried out by the head of the institution. One of the largest public scandals in Hungary's modern history, and the public indignation that followed led to the emergence of Peter Magyar in public life, who just two months later founded his Tisza Party.

Magyar said the talks were polite and non-personal, with the president indicating he would consider the points raised. 

They also discussed possible constitutional changes to strengthen the presidency, that would possibly include direct elections, while Magyar backed stronger checks on prime ministerial power. 

Hungary's president has a rather ceremonial role, with limited executive powers mainly focused on representing the state, signing legislation, and overseeing certain constitutional functions. Since the regime change, there has been no instance of a president being removed from office.

The meeting in the President's Office, with a direct view of the prime minister's office, produced one surreal moment. Magyar posted a Facebook photo showing him waving to Orban from the balcony of Sandor Palace, before the outgoing prime minister was due for his meeting with Sulyok.

The outgoing prime minister entered the president's office from the back door, not from the front, to avoid meeting the press. Hungary's veteran leader did not post anything about the talks, which according to the short statement from the president's office focused on the first tasks for the next period.

Our Homeland Movement (Mi Hazank) has launched a legal challenge to the election outcome, alleging its campaign was hindered on Facebook, party leader Lászlo Toroczkai said after meeting. The radical right-wing party won 5.7% of the vote, securing six seats in the 199-member parliament.

Toroczkai urged the winning party to "restore constitutional order" by revising what he described as a flawed and partisan constitution, while adding that he opposes removing the president before the end of his term.

Magyar made headline news on April 15 with his first appearance in state media since September 2024 in the early hours, where he was questioned about his programmes and his comments  shaking up the media landscape. Magyar pledged to restore free and open press in public media in the campaing trail and this promise is a key to unlocking frozen EU funds

Magyar said that one of his first steps after forming a government would be suspending the "propaganda media's" news service, insisting it had "inflicted enormous damage on Hungarians"  The exchanges quickly became very tense and confrontational, with Magyar and the interviewers frequently interrupting each other, and the opposition leader was also seen losing his composure at times.

Addressing Fidesz voters, Magyar stressed that 1mn pensioners were living below the subsistence level, 400,000 children were in deep poverty and hundreds were freezing to death in their own homes, that Orban's childhood friend, seen as his proxy "Lorinc Meszaros became five times richer in a decade than the British royal family in 400 years", and that the state burns HUF160bn (€440mn) each year just on the budget of the state media conglomerate MTVA, which merged the operations of state radio, television and the Hungarian news agency MTI.

In a circular sent to MTVA news directors, some 100 employees of MTI on April 15 called for editorial independence, or restoring their right to edit and publish stories without external approval.

MTI journalists have openly confirmed what had already been reported: that content originating from state secretary level or above must be automatically forwarded for approval to the office of Antal Rogan, who oversees government communications as well as intelligence operations. Foreign policy topics such as gender issues, Ukraine, and corporate stories of government-linked companies such as 4iG, Opus, and MBH Bank also require higher-level approval.

The demand followed a day of heightened tensions after Peter Magyar gave interviews to public media outlets and was later applauded by some staff members inside the building.

MTVA news director Zsolt Nemeth, nicknamed "Pitbull", told an early afternoon staff meeting that editorial operations would remain unchanged until a change of government, and that employees unable to accept the situation should take leave or work in a reduced capacity.

Peter Magyar also reacted to the latest developments, calling on management not to take disciplinary action against employees who sign the circular.

He thanked staff for their reception and wished public media employees strength in the coming weeks until what he called the removal of "political commissars". The new government's first measures would include the immediate suspension of public media news services until conditions for impartial and objective reporting are restored, he added.

Major fiscal challenges ahead for Hungary's incoming Tisza government

Major fiscal challenges ahead for Hungary's incoming Tisza government
/ Facebook/Peter MagyarFacebook
By IntelliNews April 15, 2026

The new Hungarian government will face significant macroeconomic and public finance challenges following the election, driven by weak economic growth, a high budget deficit and a rising public debt burden, Fitch Ratings said in an assessment published in London, financial website Portfolio.hu wrote on April 14.

The decisive victory of the Tisza Party is expected to improve relations between Hungary and the European Union, while reducing the risk that institutional resistance could hinder the implementation of the new government’s policy agenda, it said.

Fitch analysts said they would now focus their sovereign credit assessment on the credibility and feasibility of the incoming government’s fiscal consolidation strategy, as well as its impact on debt dynamics and economic growth.

The agency said pre-election fiscal loosening, rising debt levels and an uncertain consolidation path had been key factors behind its decision in December to revise Hungary’s “BBB” sovereign rating outlook to negative.

Fitch said the Hungarian economy has essentially stagnated since 2023, with average annual GDP growth of just 0.1%, significantly below the 4.2% average recorded between 2015 and 2019.

According to the report, weak growth has been driven by an unfavourable external environment, rising uncertainty, a decline in public investment, and structural economic challenges, including stagnating labour productivity and weakening external price competitiveness.

At the same time, Fitch said it expects Hungary’s economic growth to accelerate to 2% in 2026 and 2.4% in 2027, which is below the government’s 3% target for 2026.

The recovery is expected to be supported by a rebound in private consumption following pre-election fiscal easing, stronger investment activity, and new export capacity from the automotive and battery manufacturing sectors, it added.

However, the agency warned that sustained high energy prices due to geopolitical tensions could pose risks to the outlook, noting that Hungary is a net energy importer and highly dependent on EU economic performance.

Fitch also said that the pro-EU stance of Tisza Party leader Peter Magyar and the party’s strong parliamentary mandate are likely to improve cooperation with Brussels, including the possible unblocking of EU funds and progress on addressing rule-of-law, judicial independence and corruption concerns.

This could pave the way for the release of currently frozen EU financing, although it remains unclear how quickly this would translate into stronger growth, it added.

The budget gap is slated to rise to 5.6% of GDP this year from 4.7% last year, mainly due to pre-election fiscal expansion and energy-related subsidies, and is projected to decline to 5% of GDP by 2027, it added.

Just days before the election, the National Economy Ministry released Q1 fiscal data showing that the cash-flow-based deficit exceeded 80% of the full-year target. In a short comment, the ministry added that the 5% deficit target could be met.

The agency said the new government would need to restore confidence in fiscal policy and strengthen the budgetary framework after developing a medium-term consolidation strategy, pointing to frequent changes in fiscal targets and repeated deviations from budget plans in recent years.

Fitch also noted that Hungary’s commitment to reducing public debt has not been reflected in recent performance, as the debt-to-GDP ratio increased from 73.3% in 2023 to 73.5% in 2024 and 74.6% last year.

The government is in a tight spot as reviews by the top three rating agencies are due within the next two months. Moody’s is due to review Hungary on May 22, followed by Standard & Poor’s on May 29 and Fitch Ratings on June 5.

The economic programme of the incoming government is based on restoring EU funding, tax reform, pension increases and a more competitive growth model, as the Orban government's fiscal policy had lost credibility, Andras Karman, Tisza Party’s expert on budgetary and tax policy, told leftist daily Nepszava. After a revision, the government will submit a new budget within 100 days. The election pledges would be financed through a combination of EU funds, fiscal reforms and economic growth, while also aiming to ensure a sustainable reduction in the budget deficit.

On the broader outlook, he said GDP has stagnated over the last three years, due to deep structural problems rather than cyclical ones.  Hungarian wages have fallen behind the EU average, with only Bulgaria and Greece ranking lower, and Romania is now ahead of Hungary. However, wage convergence cannot be sustained without productivity growth. The Orban government’s economic policy in the past 15 years has been characterised by an extensive growth model, driven by low-cost labour and foreign investment in assembly industries, which boosted output until 2020 without improving productivity. This model, he argued, had exhausted its potential and called for a shift towards fair competition, reduced corruption, and greater investment in education, healthcare, and human capital.

The budget expert also urged a more innovation-driven, productivity-focused economy with a stronger role for SMEs, which he said would be key to restoring growth and wage convergence.

On taxation, he said the system was unfair as lower-income households bear a relatively higher burden due to the highest VAT among OECD countries. He flagged that the headline 27% rate will remain in place, but consumers would pay 5% or no taxes on medicines, firewood and healthy food, saying that targeted reductions would be more effective.

Targeted income tax cuts would be launched via a tax credit for incomes below the median wage, affecting around half of taxpayers, while the minimum wage tax burden would fall from 15% to 9%.

The new Tisza government, in line with its election promises, will introduce a new annual wealth tax of 1% on assets above HUF1bn, covering both productive assets, such as company ownership and non-productive assets, such as luxury property.

The pension reforms would address long-standing disparities, including higher minimum pensions, retention of the 13th and 14th month pensions and the introduction of a voucher card for pensioners that can be used for food and medicine.

He said pension indexation could be adjusted in the longer term to better track wage growth, with details to be worked out after consultations.

The reduction of the retail sector taxes would be considered in the longer term, provided they led to lower prices for households. Multinational companies, bearing much of the impact of the windfall tax, have called for a reduction in the levy, which has led to massive losses, as well as unorthodox measures such as a profit margin cap.

In the interview, Karman did not touch on that, nor on plans on the fuel price cap. The measure was introduced without an end-date on March 9, and according to energy analysts the measure has played a part in the steep fall of the strategic reserves. This had fallen to a record low of 44 days from over 90 days, at the onset.

On the government’s broader fiscal policy plans, he said the focus was not on rapidly cutting the deficit but on establishing a credible, medium-term fiscal policy that would put public debt on a declining path. Predictable budget management and sustained economic growth are both needed to achieve lasting deficit reduction, he said, noting that the release of some €22bn of frozen EU funds is the most vital thing.

Additional resources could be generated by reducing corruption and eliminating overpriced public procurements, which he said could yield HUF1 trillion in savings each year and that setting target dates for the euro could cut risk premiums. 

Additional savings are expected from reducing unnecessary expenditures, including spending on propaganda, excessive funding for public media, and support for quasi-civil organisations.

He also highlighted the high cost of Hungary’s debt financing, noting that interest payments approach 5% of GDP, significantly above regional levels, leaving room for savings through more credible economic policy.

Strengthening policy credibility and setting a clear path towards euro adoption could lower risk premiums and borrowing costs, he said.

The government aims to meet the criteria for adopting the euro by 2030, which he said would support lower inflation, faster growth and improved investor confidence.  A revised budget and a medium-term economic programme outlining the path to euro adoption are expected to be prepared in the coming months, he added.

In his first international press briefing after the election, Magyar also spoke about the government’s plans to adopt the euro, comments that helped drive the forint to a four-year high. The EUR/HUF pair moved from 376 to 363 in the last two days.

In an interview with Portfolio.hu, former central bank governor Akos Peter Bod, said the new government will inherit a significant economic legacy, uncertain public finances, and a challenging external environment.

The election outcome quickly calmed markets, with the forint strengthening due to reduced political uncertainty and the clear two-thirds parliamentary mandate.  Restoring confidence could in itself support economic growth, as many companies had delayed investment decisions due to political uncertainty. The coming weeks will be crucial as early decisions are required on the budget, energy policy, pricing and EU relations during the government transition period.

In its latest forecast released on April 14, the IMF lowered its 2026 global GDP outlook from 3.3% in January to 3.1%, below its long-term average. For Hungary, it expects growth to pick up from 0.4% 2025 to 1.7%, and by 2% in 2027. Inflation is expected to slow, falling from 4.4% last year to 3.8% in 2026 and 3.5% in 2027. The IMF’s previous autumn forecast had projected 2.1% growth for Hungary.

Hungary vote driven by domestic anger but opens door to EU reset, analysts say

Hungary vote driven by domestic anger but opens door to EU reset, analysts say
/ Tisza via FacebookFacebook
By Clare Nuttall in Glasgow April 14, 2026

Tisza's April 12 landslide election victory in Hungary reflects deep domestic frustration rather than foreign policy concerns, but could pave the way for a reset in relations with the European Union, analysts told a European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) webinar on April 13.

The result was a dramatic shift in Hungarian politics, with opposition leader Péter Magyar securing more than 3mn votes, ending Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s long era in power.

“The election showed overwhelmingly that Hungarian society wanted change,” said Zsuzsanna Végh,  programme officer at the German Marshall Fund. 

“The result is incredibly impressive from a party that has just been around for less than two years. We have never seen such a high turnout in Hungary … it is a massive landslide victory that went well beyond the capital.” She highlighted the scale of mobilisation, noting that “nearly 6mn voted, we have never seen a party getting this much support.”

Végh said voters were driven primarily by domestic grievances. “There was frustration because of the erosion of democracy, but it was largely economic issues,” she said. Cost-of-living pressures and dissatisfaction with governance dominated voter concerns.

Domestic focus, European implications

That assessment was echoed by Paweł Zerka, senior policy fellow at the ECFR, who said voters were motivated mainly by internal issues rather than foreign policy.

“Few people voted because of foreign policy or European issues,” Zerka said. Among Magyar’s supporters, he noted that one third cited corruption and governance; others prioritised the cost of living and inflation, or decaying public services.”

However, he argued that these concerns overlap with Hungary’s relationship with Europe. Voters may have supported change in order for Hungary “to become — or re-become — a normal European country, with not too much corruption, that benefits from EU funds to support the growth of the national economy.”

The scale of the victory gives the incoming government a strong mandate to repair ties with Brussels, analysts said, although questions remain.

According to Végh, early priorities are likely to include reforms aimed at unlocking frozen EU funds. “Immediate reforms necessary for the release of Hungary’s frozen structural funds and recovery funds… will also necessitate a reset with the EU,” she said.

Piotr Buras, head of ECFR Warsaw and senior policy fellow  said the result signals a broader shift in Hungary’s European orientation, pointing to Magyar’s mandate for reorientation of Hungary’s foreign policy, though he cautioned against excessive optimism.

“I would warn against too high expectations,” Buras said, drawing parallels with Donald Tusk’s victory against the rightwing Law and Justice (PiS) party in Poland where, he said, after the initial euphoria after the election, “some of the expectations have been disappointed because of domestic constraints, the expectations of Polish society.”

Ukraine and Russia policy

One key test will be Hungary’s stance on Ukraine. Buras said a minimum expectation from the EU would be that Budapest aligns with core European positions. “Whether Budapest subscribes to the European consensus… I think this is the minimum,” he said.

But deeper support may prove more complicated. Zerka noted divisions among voters; while Magyar’s supporters are generally more sympathetic to Ukraine than Fidesz’, they are split on issues such as financial aid and EU membership. “The government won’t have national numbers to be too pro-Ukrainian,” she said.

On Russia, analysts suggested there is more room for change. Végh argued that previous policies were influenced by external factors rather than domestic demand. “Not the promotion of Hungarian interests, but the protection of Russian interests,” she said. A series of recent scandals exposing apparent links between Moscow and top-level Fidesz officials has sparked a backlash against Orban’s pro-Russian stance, which is likely to give the new leadership space to shift position.

Despite expectations of a reset, analysts stressed that change is likely to be gradual and selective.

Végh said reforms would initially focus on core democratic institutions. “Rule of law, anti corruption, judiciary reforms will be a priority, the institutional core of democracy,” she said, while noting uncertainty over broader issues such as pluralism and minority rights.

Buras also pointed to Hungary’s continued dependence on Russian energy. Plans to end reliance on Russian oil and gas by 2035 make Hungary an outlier in the EU. 

The Hungarian election could also reshape dynamics within the EU, particularly within the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP). Buras suggested Magyar’s victory might strengthen more conservative voices in European debates. For example Hungary’s new leadership, alongside figures such as Tusk, could play a greater role in shaping EU policies on issues like migration and climate.

However, initially, the immediate focus will be on domestic reforms and rebuilding trust with European partners.

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