Hungarians vote in big numbers on whether to end Orbán rule and elect rival

Record turnout marks Hungarian election as challenger Péter Magyar seeks to unseat long-standing Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.

Record turnout marks Hungarian election as challenger Péter Magyar seeks to unseat long-standing Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. | Contesto: cronaca

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  • Hungarians vote in big numbers on whether to end Orbán rule and elect rival

Contesto

Hungarians voted in unprecedented numbers on Sunday in a parliamentary election widely seen as a referendum on the 14-year rule of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Early figures indicated a record-breaking national turnout, with voters flocking to polling stations to decide whether to grant Orbán's Fidesz party a fourth consecutive term or to elect Péter Magyar, the former insider turned grassroots challenger who has dominated the opposition campaign. The capital, Budapest, was the focal point of the contest, though the outcome hinged on votes from across the nation's counties. The surge in participation signals a potent and possibly decisive shift in Hungary's political landscape, which has been dominated by Orbán's centralized power for nearly a decade and a half. Analysts point to the high engagement as a direct response to the stark choice presented to the electorate: continuity under a leader who has reshaped the state's institutions, or a sharp turn toward a new political force promising wholesale change. The remarkable turnout, surpassing previous elections, suggests that Magyar's campaign has successfully mobilized voters who had grown disenchanted or apathetic. Péter Magyar, a lawyer and former justice ministry official once married to Orbán's former justice minister, has led a meteoric rise from political obscurity to the forefront of the opposition. His party, Tisza, built from a grassroots movement over just a few months, has capitalized on widespread fatigue with Fidesz and disillusionment with a fragmented opposition. Magyar's strategy has been to position himself as a clean break from both Orbán's system and the old guard of the opposition, focusing his message on anti-corruption, judicial independence, and mending Hungary's strained relations with the European Union. The election represents the most serious challenge to Viktor Orbán's political hegemony since he returned to power in 2010. During his tenure, Orbán has transformed Hungary through a series of constitutional and legislative changes, cementing Fidesz's control over the media, the judiciary, and large sectors of the economy. His brand of "illiberal democracy" has frequently put him at...

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Categoria: cronaca