Hungary's Tisza Party wins parliamentary supermajority ousting Viktor Orbánousting Viktor Orbán
Hungary's opposition Tisza Party, led by Péter Magyar, secured a two-thirds majority in parliamentary elections on April 12, winning around 135-138 of 199 seats. Incumbent Prime Minister Viktor Orbán conceded defeat after 16 years in power, congratulating Magyar as partial and near-final results confirmed the landslide. Voter turnout reached a record 78 percent amid campaigns focused on anti-corruption and EU alignment.
The victory ends Orbán's dominance and enables Tisza to amend the constitution, restore rule of law, and shift Hungary toward stronger European Union ties. Ukraine welcomes the outcome as it removes a key EU opponent, potentially unlocking vital aid, while markets surged and global leaders like France's Macron praised the democratic shift. Péter Magyar aims to take office by early May, promising to reverse Orbán-era policies on Russia and Ukraine.
EU-aligned Media
Tisza's win marks a democratic triumph that restores Hungary's place in Europe. Péter Magyar, once close to Orbán, now pledges to dismantle illiberal structures brick by brick and align fully with EU values. The high turnout reflects Hungarians' desire for change after years of isolation.
Ukraine's View
Orbán's defeat removes Hungary's fiercest critic in the EU, clearing hurdles for 90 billion euros in war funding. Kyiv sees this as vital support amid its conflict with Russia. The shift promises smoother EU consensus on aid and sanctions.
Chinese Perspective
Beijing remains unconcerned despite Orbán's ouster, citing booming trade with Hungary that outpaces EU averages. Ties built under Orbán endure through economic momentum. The new government faces entrenched institutions limiting rapid policy reversals.
- The Tisza River, Hungary's longest, inspired the party's name, symbolizing national unity.
- Orbán coined 'illiberal democracy' in a 2014 speech, defending non-Western governance models.
- Hungary joined the EU in 2004 alongside nine other Central and Eastern European states.