Republikon Institute expects high turnout at upcoming election

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In the April 12 election “it may not be the overall turnout but rather its distribution that proves decisive, particularly in terms of the evolving differences between rural and urban turnout,” the Rebublikon Institute said in an analysis published on Tuesday.

According to the institute, opinion polls indicate “an extremely high willingness” to vote ahead of the election. The record is held by the 2002 election, with turnout rates of 70.5 percent and 73.5 percent in its two rounds (after a subsequent change in the law, elections have been held in a single round since 2014).

This record could be broken this year, as voter turnout in elections since 1989 has fluctuated, yet “it has clearly moved in tandem with the stakes of the vote,” and “in 2026, both sides are attaching greater weight to the elections than ever before,” the report said.

Rebublikon also found a stable correlation between turnout and the size of the municipality, meaning a higher the turnout in larger settlements.

At the same time, the institute pointed out that between 2018 and 2022, the disparities in voter turnout narrowed slightly, as turnout increased in smaller towns. According to the analysis, this rise in rural mobilisation is linked to ruling Fidesz’s growing support in villages and small towns.

According to the report, the 2026 election “will take place in a new political landscape with the emergence of the Tisza Party,” which could also influence the regional pattern of turnout, with the opposition party’s performance in rural communities possibly increasing.

Based on data from the 2018 and 2022 elections and the differences between them, the difference in voter turnout between cities and rural areas is likely to persist, but the question whether rural mobilisation would continue to converge with the national average and how the emergence of Tisza would reshape the geographic structure of voter turnout would only become apparent after the election, it said.

Republikon said turnout was closely tied to the balance of support between parties, but the in the 2026 election distribution would be key, especially in terms of how differences between rural and urban turnout evolve.

If you missed – previous articles concerning the 2026 general elections:

Featured image: depositphotos.com

2 Comments

  1. I think a high turnout favours those who are fed up with the status quo – in other words : a high turnout helps Tisza and Mi Hazánk.

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