European elections 2024: Huge changes on the Hungarian political map, this is how the parties commented
Undoubtedly, the 2024 EP and municipal elections brought a huge reshuffle on the Hungarian political map. Some parties have so far looked strong but have barely received any votes, and on the opposition side, there is only one clear winner from yesterday’s election, Péter Magyar and the Tisza Party.
List | Number of valid votes cast for the list | Percentage of valid votes cast for a list | Mandates obtained |
FIDESZ-KDNP | 2 015 972 | 44,62% | 11 |
TISZA | 1 341 499 | 29,69% | 7 |
MSZP-DK-Párbeszéd- ZÖLDEK | 366 093 | 8,10% | 2 |
Mi Hazánk | 305 226 | 6,76% | 1 |
Momentum | 166 457 | 3,68% | 0 |
MKKP | 161 806 | 3,58% | 0 |
Jobbik | 45 323 | 1,00% | 0 |
LMP – Zöldek | 39 423 | 0,87% | 0 |
2RK Párt | 30 718 | 0,68% | 0 |
MMN | 29 111 | 0,64% | 0 |
MEMO | 16 727 | 0,37% | 0 |
Összesen | 4 518 355 | 100,00% | 21 |
Magyar: Tisza party shows that politics ‘can be beautiful, just and honest’
Péter Magyar, deputy leader and EP list-leading candidate of the Respect and Freedom (Tisza) party, said the Tisza party would prove to the Hungarian people that politics “can be beautiful, just and honest”.
“Today marks the end of an era and the start of the future,” Magyar told Tisza party supporters as the election results were announced in the early hours of Monday. “The greatest result is that this is the beginning of the end for the [Fidesz] Alliance of Young Democrats and the System of National Cooperation.”
“Despite the billions burned on propaganda, the war psychosis, the hate propaganda, the Hungarian people have seen through the charade,” he said. “Fidesz has never achieved such a weak result in the EP elections.”
“There’s no turning back; this is the slope that [former Socialist PM] Ferenc Gyurcsány also started on, and it’s easy to pick up speed up on it.”
He said Fidesz had lost the public’s trust, and had a chance to decide to call early elections in Hungary in the coming months. He insisted that one reason to call early elections was because it was uncertain whether the government could “survive the austerity that will be coming because of the state of the budget”.
He said it was up to ruling Fidesz to decide “whether they will use the next two years to continue robbing their country”.
In response to a question, he said he had not yet decided whether he would take up his mandate in the Budapest municipal assembly or the European Parliament. He noted that he had said in the past that he would not become an MEP, adding, however, that the party would be the one to decide.
Magyar said Tisza would be joining the European People’s Party in the European Parliament. He said he had discussed this with Manfred Weber, the EPP’s leader, on the phone last week, and they had agreed that Tisza will send its official application after the results came in. Tisza could join the EPP group as early as next week, he said.
Dobrev laments ‘disappointing result’
Klára Dobrev, the list-leading MEP candidate of the opposition Democratic Coalition (DK), Socialist and Dialogue-Greens parties, called the outcome of Hungary’s European parliamentary and local elections “disappointing”, at a ballot-watch early on Monday.
Dobrev said they had thought that their policies would “convince more people”.
She said three of the four parties that would be representing Hungary in the EP were right wing and they “envision a very different Europe to the one we do”. She said they still believed that a strong Europe could guarantee prosperity to Hungarians in their everyday lives.
Dobrev said that over the coming months and years DK would aim to convince more and more people that they could only prosper in a strong Europe, arguing that Hungary would be “crippled” by a weakened Europe.
Ferenc Gyurcsany, DK’s leader, said the elections had “significantly reshaped the Hungarian political map”, adding that the reasons behind this and its consequences would be discussed in depth in the coming days and weeks.
He said it was “disappointing” that DK would have fewer MEPs than they had wanted, “but the European idea we represent won’t change”.
Toroczkai: Four political forces to decide Hungary’s direction from 2026
The four political forces “that remain standing” after the 2024 European parliamentary and local elections “will be the ones to decide Hungary’s fate”, the leader of the Our Homeland Movement (Mi Hazánk) said in the early hours of Monday.
László Toroczkai told a press conference before the final results were published that it was clear his radical party had achieved its main goal of winning a seat in the European Parliament.
Concerning his party’s performance in the local elections, he said Our Homeland appeared to be the second strongest party outside the capital, arguing that the party was in second place in several county assemblies.
Donáth: ‘We will continue to build’
The Momentum party will “continue to build”, Anna Donáth, the leader of the party’s EP election list, said in Budapest early on Monday, adding that Momentum had won seats in all but one of the county assemblies, with over 20 percent in Pest county.
Assessing the results of Sunday’s local and European parliamentary elections, Donath noted that Momentum also won a number of mayoral seats, in the 6th, 8th and 14th districts of Budapest, as well as in several rural localities.
She thanked the 120,000 voters for their support in the European parliamentary elections, in which Momentum failed to reach the parliamentary threshold, adding that Momentum would carry on its work “because it has pledged to represent them”.
Márki-Zay: ‘We’re committed to making Hungary a democratic state’
The incumbent mayor of Hódmezővásárhely, Péter Márki-Zay, who was reelected in the local election on Sunday, said his Everybody’s Hungary People’s Party was committed to Hungary as a democratic state governed by the rule of law.
Márki-Zay, who is also the party’s leader and the former prime minister candidate of the joint opposition, congratulated party activists and supporters in the early hours of Monday.
Citing preliminary results, he said the ruling Fidesz-led alliance had won two fewer European Parliament seats compared with five years ago.
Read more news about European parliamentary election 2024
read also:
- Fidesz will have fewer MEPs in the EP, but Orbán sees the EP election as a victory – details HERE
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