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    Home » Peter Magyar wins Hungary parliamentary vote
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    Peter Magyar wins Hungary parliamentary vote

    April 13, 2026
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    EuroWire, BUDAPEST: Hungary’s parliamentary election delivered a decisive upset on Sunday, with Peter Magyar’s opposition Tisza party defeating Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s Fidesz alliance and ending the nationalist leader’s 16 years in power. Preliminary data from the National Election Office put turnout at nearly 80 percent, the highest recorded in a national vote in Hungary’s post-Communist era. The result capped one of the most closely watched elections in the European Union, with the campaign centered on corruption, public services, Hungary’s ties with Brussels and the country’s stance toward Russia’s war in Ukraine.

    Peter Magyar wins Hungary parliamentary vote
    Hungary election result ends Viktor Orban’s rule as Tisza wins a decisive parliamentary majority. (Credit – WAM)

    Official parliamentary seat allocations showed Tisza winning 138 of the National Assembly’s 199 seats, enough for a two-thirds majority. Fidesz secured 55 seats, while the far-right Mi Hazank movement won six. The scale of the result gave Magyar a commanding parliamentary position after a campaign in which his party emerged as the main challenger to the governing bloc. The final distribution confirmed that the election produced not only a change in government, but one of the clearest parliamentary verdicts in Hungary since the end of communist rule.

    Orban conceded defeat late Sunday and said his party would continue its work from the opposition benches. The loss marked a sharp reversal for a leader who had dominated Hungarian politics since returning to office in 2010 and who had become one of Europe’s longest-serving prime ministers. During his time in office, his government repeatedly clashed with European Union institutions over rule of law standards, judicial independence, media freedom and access to EU funds, placing the election at the center of wider attention across the continent.

    Record turnout redraws parliament

    Magyar, 45, rose from former Fidesz insider to the head of the country’s strongest opposition force in little more than a year. He campaigned on anti-corruption measures and on everyday issues including health care, transport and living standards, while presenting the vote as a decision about Hungary’s place in Europe. His ascent transformed a fragmented opposition landscape and turned the election into a direct contest between a new center-right movement and the long-entrenched governing alliance that had shaped Hungary’s political system for more than a decade.

    International monitors from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe observed the vote after a heated campaign marked by sharp rhetoric on the European Union, Ukraine and foreign influence. The election was followed closely in Brussels, Washington and Moscow because Orban had become one of the EU’s most prominent nationalist leaders and had maintained comparatively warm ties with Russia. Hungary has also been at the center of disputes over suspended EU funding linked to governance standards and anti-corruption safeguards, adding to the significance of the ballot beyond its national outcome.

    Concession confirms end of era

    After the result became clear, supporters of Tisza gathered in Budapest along the Danube and near Parliament, waving Hungarian and EU flags as car horns echoed across the city. Images from the capital showed celebrations continuing into early Monday, underscoring the scale of the political shift. Orban supporters, meanwhile, assembled at Fidesz headquarters for the concession speech, where the outgoing prime minister acknowledged the result. The scenes captured a rare transfer of political momentum in a country where Fidesz had dominated elections and state institutions for years.

    The vote closes one of the most consequential chapters in Hungary’s post-Communist politics, replacing a government that had become a reference point for nationalist movements abroad with a newly empowered opposition-led majority at home. With Tisza holding a supermajority in the 199-seat assembly and turnout reaching a modern record, the result immediately altered the balance of power in Budapest and across Hungary’s political landscape. The final seat distribution reflected that shift in full.

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