PM Orbán: ‘Hungarian democracy is alive and well – Update
Hungarian democracy “is alive and well”, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said in an interview with current affairs channel M1 on Monday, thanking voters for the 57 percent turnout in Sunday’s elections.
Concerning the state of affairs after the EP elections, Viktor Orbán said that if the European Conservatives and Reformists and the Identity and Democracy groups reached an agreement and Fidesz and KDNP joined them, the right would find itself in second place trailing only the European People’s Party.
If a strong right wing could be formed, “that would have a gravitational pull”, and even parties currently in the EPP may join them. “There’s a need for the big players to reach an agreement here, and if they do, it’ll open a clear and straight path for Fidesz as well.”
Commenting on the local elections, Orbán said the ruling parties had performed better than expected, adding, however, that he would have wanted to hold on to all of Fidesz’s localities and win people’s trust in even more municipalities.
Orbán said they had flipped four cities with county seat status but lost three, while becoming the strongest party in all of the county assemblies. “We’ve remained the dominant political force in 20 counties, we ended up with a tie in the Budapest districts, losing one and winning another.”
At the same time, Orbán added that “in such times of war, with an excruciating wartime inflation behind us, beating the party in second place by 14 percent is a decent result”. The prime minister said he would accept such a result in 2026, because it would give the ruling party a comfortable advantage in the general election.
“That’s how democracy is: all elections are hard, success doesn’t come free, and we should be happy we won yesterday’s,” Orban said.
Concerning Alexandra Szentkirályi’s withdrawal from the mayoral race in Budapest, Orbán said Szentkirályi “was of the opinion that if all three of them remained in the running, there won’t be any change in Budapest”. Szentkirályi, he added, had “advised that we take the chance given to us by her withdrawal”.
Orbán said there was “a lot of work to do” in Budapest because it was a city that was “financially bankrupt”. “There’s a lot of work to do to allow Budapest residents to live in the kind of city they deserve,” he added.
He said that only time and work mattered in politics. The prime minister said Hungarians valued the “stable and predictable work carried out by the government” which he said was missing “in almost every other European country”. Orban said only 20 percent of his work was political in nature, with the remaining 80 percent being government-related work, but this was the other way round in western Europe.
“If you have gold cover behind you, you win,” the prime minister said, adding that Hungarians tended to look ahead to the next election, but now it was time to get to work. “When the time comes we’ll fight and we’ll win,” he said.
“We can’t swim a new world record every day, but there isn’t a party in Europe or Hungary today that wouldn’t trade with us,” he added.
As we wrote today, Fidesz will have fewer MEPs in the EP, but Orbán sees the EP election as a victory, details HERE.
Orbán: Pro-peace side won in Europe
The European parliamentary elections were won by the pro-peace side, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said.
Orbán said the election had been a chance to slow Europe’s drift into the war. He said this had been stopped in France, too, with the pro-peace forces winning by such a large margin that an early parliamentary election had to be called.
“We await President Donald Trump … and then there will be peace,” the prime minister added.
He said that the more than 2 million votes cast for Fidesz meant that the ruling party had received a record number of votes.
Orbán said Hungarian democracy “is alive and well” and he thanked voters for the 57 percent turnout in Sunday’s elections.
Concerning the importance of mobilising the party’s base, the prime minister said there were always voters who had to be mobilised, but this time everyone had been told that this election was a matter of war or peace.
Regarding Peter Magyar’s Tisza Party, the prime minister said: “It complicated our lives.” An already complicated election was made even knottier because they had to beat two oppositions: the old and the new, he said. “And we did, by 14 percent,” he added.
Referring to the local election, Orbán said in some cities trust had been kept and Fidesz had even managed to increase its support and win back big cities, but it also lost cities. “The lesson is to work harder; only work done with humility helps,” he said.
Orbán welcomed not losing more cities than they gained, and he said Fidesz had not been weakened in Budapest.
In the EP election, they won “streets ahead” of the opposition “in this difficult, wartime situation”.
The EP elections were won by the pro-peace side, Orbán said, adding that the election had been a chance to slow Europe’s drift into the war. He said this had been stopped in France, too, with the pro-peace forces winning by such a large margin that an early parliamentary election had to be called, describing this as “a political earthquake”.
“We await President Donald Trump … and then there will be peace,” the prime minister added.
Meanwhile, Orbán said,
“We must return to the detailed business of governing while also keeping our eyes on the issue of war and peace.”
The prime minister listed protecting the value of pensions, ensuring full employment and home building, saying “you can’t govern by the logic of the [election] campaign; governing is about the calm of everyday life in the country.”
Elections in Hungary: the most important happenings – UPDATE
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5 Comments
Soros, Pressman and Biden lost the election in Hungary. Their interference did not help them. Hungarians like the government they elected and definitely agree with laws enacted, e.g. no uneducated criminal illegal aliens and not following in Josef Mengele’s footsteps in mutilating minors.
Rule by decree for four years now is not democracy. Legislation is passed without debate. Monopolization of virtually all television, radio, print media and billboard advertising in the hands of the governing party is not democracy. Orban has not subjected himself to an election debate in almost 20 years. That is not democracy. Giving the opposition leader only five minutes on national television prior to the the 2022 national election while Fidesz politicians get unlimited television exposure and interviews is not democracy. Maria von teresa is back with conspiracy nonsense about Soros and the Americans trying to influence Hungarians. Not a word about the evil claws of Russia that are dug deep into Fidesz and Hungary. America is the leader of the free world. Orban brings you war criminal Putin. Xi and repression.
How about real facts that Tisza won 31% of the vote, which is absolutely outstanding for Péter Magyar.
Tisza made history for the first time in Hungary, but this newspaper seems to ignore a new beginning.
Magyar made Gyurcsány’s lot redundant, and made Fidesz to lose a seat in the EU.
Considering these two years for the upcoming general election will cause Orbán a headache.
I was going write a few things but Maria summed it up well. The foreign and foreign-funded “opposition” pulled out all the stops and they still got creamed. Hungarians don’t want their country to be turned into a globalist-socialist dystopia full of violent illegal alien invaders and fluorescent-haired nonbinary freaks while the normal young men are sent to Ukraine to die.
Agree with @Nick. Peter Magyar formed the party on 15 March and has won 31% of the votes in fewer than three months. People are fed up with Fidesz or Fideath, as it now seems to be known as.