On Sunday, Viktor Orban, who had been Prime Minister of Hungary for 16 years, was heavily defeated by the upstart candidate Peter Magyar. Orban’s Fidesz party was reduced to only 55 seats in the 199-seat Parliament, allowing Magyar’s Tisza to have a supermajority to hopefully undo the most extreme excesses of the Orban era. According to a report in the Guardian, Hungarians were fed up with the stagnant economy and woeful healthcare and education systems that have been neglected for far too long. As for Peter Magyar, he is an interesting figure in Hungarian politics. He was an Orbán loyalist for many years, but he broke with the government over a scandal relating to the pardoning of a government official who covered up years of abuse at a state-run children’s home. According to a report by PBS, Magyar wants parliament to transfer power on May 5th; whether that happens is up for debate.
Tag: Magyar
Stakes in the Hungarian Election Are Ramping Up
On April 12, Hungary is facing one of the most consequential elections in its history. The two main contenders are Viktor Orbán, the autocratic leader of the Fidesz Party (which, in English, roughly translates to Hungarian Civic Alliance). His main opponent is Peter Magyar, the head of the Tisza Party (roughly translated as the Respect and Freedom Party. Magyar is a former Orbán loyalist who turned against his boss due to the rampant corruption in Orbán’s government. Even though the election is still weeks away, there have been troubling allegations made about Orban’s campaign. Firstly, according to a report in the BBC, voter intimidation has been widely reported, with political operatives attached to Fidesz offering money and, in some cases, illegal drugs to voters to induce them. On top of that, there was a report last Saturday in the Washington Post about a plan by Russian Intelligence to shore up support for Orban by staging a fake assassination attempt against him. As the election date nears, I am sure we will hear of more tactics to sway the election in Orban’s favor.