Karácsony vs Vitézy: Result of Budapest mayoral election scrapped – will the tide turn?

Live debate Karácsony vs Vitézy budapest

The Constitutional Court has ordered the supreme court, the Kuria, to call for a recount of all votes cast in last month’s election for Budapest mayor, a decision posted on the top court’s website showed.

Budapest mayoral election result scrapped

Live debate Karácsony vs Vitézy
Photo: FB/Partizán

The Constitutional Court on Friday scrapped as unconstitutional a recent ruling by the Kuria, which had okayed the results of the June 9 mayoral election in Budapest, according to the decision.

According to the Constitutional Court, the Kuria had failed to appropriately justify its decision to reject a request to review the National Election Committee’s decree, which had established that incumbent Mayor Gergely Karácsony had won the ballot as against contender Dávid Vitézy with just 41 votes.

Under the top court’s ruling, the Supreme Court is obliged to repeat its procedure and make a new decision.

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Will the French election influence the fate of Europe? PM Orbán believes so

PM Orbán and Macron

France’s parliamentary election will not only influence the number of groups or representatives in the European Parliament but the future of the whole of Europe, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said in an interview with public radio on Friday.

He said it was unprecedented in France for a right-wing party to make a breakthrough in a domestic election. The right, he added, had been cordoned off and excluded from French politics in recent decades, deemed unfit for cooperation by other parties.

But they had broken through this cordon, Orbán said, “and if I’m right, not by a small but by a big margin — if we’re interpreting the first round correctly.”

Such a momentous development in France would precipitate change “that will immediately affect the entire continent”, he said, adding that this would also influence ties between Hungary and France.

Regarding the Patriots for Europe group, the Hungarian PM said a founding meeting will take place on Monday. Parties will gather that have already decided to join but have not yet announced their intention to do so, he added.

The politician reiterated that the force could possibly end up being the second-largest grouping in the EP.

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Dávid Vitézy calls recount of invalid votes thorough, justified

vitézy Hungarian green opposition party supports PM Orbán's relative for Budapest's mayor

The recount of invalid votes cast in the Budapest mayoral election at the June 9 municipal elections was meticulous and justified, Dávid Vitézy, incumbent mayor Gergely Karácsony’s contender, said on Friday evening.

Hungarian green opposition party supports PM Orbán's relative for Budapest's mayor
Photo: FB/Vitézy

In Sunday’s election, Karácsony garnered 371,466 votes and Dávid Vitézy 371,142. Vitézy appealed against the municipal election office’s results referring to a high number of invalid votes, and the election committee NVB ordered a recount.

The National Election Office on Friday carried out a recount of valid votes that had been erroneously classified as invalid, and scrutinised each vote with more than one mark on the sheet.

The head of NVB announced on Friday evening that the recount had resulted in another 112 valid votes for Karacsony and 395 for Vitézy, with Karacsony winning the election with 41 votes.

Vitézy afterwards thanked the election office for its work and congratulated Karacsony on winning the ballot.

However, in a statement, Vitézy referred to “serious problems around counting votes” which he said “could even call for “a recount of valid votes not yet recounted”.

Vitézy also responded to Karacsony’s calling for a new election in the whole of Budapest despite Friday’s recount turning out in his favour, with the mayor claiming that “the whole process has been infinitely manipulative, full of political misleading, tricks, and wire-tapping.” Vitézy said he was ready to face the challenge.

He noted his appeal against the result of the election in two districts led by the Democratic Coalition, claiming that voters had been deliberately misled in those districts.

Vitézy said that whatever would be the outcome of the legal proceedings still pending, he would accept the final official binding results of the elections once declared.

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Votes cast at Hungary’s foreign missions counted

election hungary votes

The National Election Office (NVI) has counted the votes cast at Hungary’s diplomatic missions in the recent European parliamentary elections.

election hungary votes
Photo: MTI/Szigetváry Zsolt

Voters living in Hungary but staying abroad on the day of the election had an opportunity to cast their ballots at 147 Hungarian embassies or consular offices in 99 countries. The 166 ballot boxes were brought to Hungary late on Wednesday.

According to NVI’s website, a total 18,661 Hungarians voted abroad, casting 17,234 valid votes. NVI’s preliminary figures have shown that the newly established Respect and Freedom (Tisza) party garnered 50.8 percent of the votes, followed by the ruling parties with 18.7 percent, Momentum Movement 12.8 percent, Two-tailed Dog 9.2 percent, Socialists-Democratic Coalition-Greens 3.8 percent, Our Homeland 2.2 percent, Second Reform Age 1 percent, LMP Greens 0.6 percent.

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The election strengthened the government, says Hungarian minister

viktor orbán ep elections

Sunday’s local and European parliamentary elections have strengthened the government and given it a strong mandate to continue “spreading the message of peace” in international relations, the head of the Prime Minister’s Office told a regular press briefing on Thursday.

Without a boost to its pro-peace stance, the government “would have been unable to keep Hungary out of NATO’s military mission in Ukraine,” Gergely Gulyás said.

The “fair” agreement between Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg earlier this week, which maintained Hungarian interests, was partly thanks to the election results, Gulyás said.

“Hungarian money, weapons or soldiers will not participate in the NATO mission in Ukraine,” Gulyás said, adding that the government saw the mission as extremely dangerous that could end in the war spreading to larger areas, “in Hungary’s immediate neighbourhood”.

Hungary continues to provide asylum to those fleeing the war, he added.

Speaking about the decision of the Court of Justice of the European Union to fine Hungary 200 million euros for not complying with EU legislations on asylum and on returning illegal immigrants to their home countries, Gulyás called the ruling “outrageous, unfair and unacceptable”.

The minister said the ruling contradicted EU law, was incompatible with Hungary’s constitution and penalised the country which had rejected illegal migration from the beginning, protecting its own and Europe’s external borders.

This ruling “could never have been passed by a normal court,” he added.

Gulyás noted that the ruling went beyond the original claim of the complainant. The European Commission requested a condemnation of 7 million euros and a daily fine of 6 million euros until compliance, whereas the court ordered Hungary to pay a lump sum of 200 million euros and a daily fine of 1 million euros, that is seventy times the fine originally requested.

The ruling goes completely against everything we think about European law, the Hungarian constitution, the protection of external borders and effective action against migration, Gulyás said.

Government spokeswoman Eszter Vitalyos said that over the past two weeks, 310 billion forints (EUR 780m) worth of investments, supported with government funds, were opened in Hungary.

Out of 84 large projects, 125 billion forints were spent on public road infrastructure development, including 116 billion forints on a bridge spanning the Danube between Kalocsa and Paks and 2.5 billion forints for an M1 motorway exit at Paty.

Regarding health care, she highlighted Pecs University’s new emergency medical centre for children which received 2.7 billion forints in government support.

A total of 14 billion forints worth of investments were carried out in culture and public education, including 12 billion forints for the revamp of a Tisza castle in Geszt.

She added that a tourism development project has been completed in the Szolnok castle and a 700 metre long bridge dubbed the bridge of national cohesion was opened in Satoraljaujhely.

Company development investments included a 115 billion forint grant to a capacity expansion at an electric parts plant in Szolnok, in central Hungary, a 80 billion forint expansion of energy drink maker Hell’s plant in Szikszó, Vitalyos said. Other grants supported family-friendly and education investments at a pilgrimage site in Matraverebely, in northern Hungary, in Miskolc, Karcag and other localities.

A home renovation programme is also in the works, with the tender opening for the public in July, she said.

Fielding a question on the recount of the votes cast on the Budapest mayor candidates on Sunday, Gulyás said it was in everyone’s interest with such a close race that the result should be legitimate and beyond doubt. He said he expected the recount to clearly decide who won the election.

Gulyás said there were many ways of looking at the election results. Compared to the previous election, the governing parties won less in percentage terms but that came after two challenging years of war, an energy crisis and economic difficulties. After two years like this, “we achieved the best result in Europe and received more votes than ever in a European parliamentary election”, indeed, more than the parties that finished in second, third and fourth places combined, he added.

On the opposition Momentum party’s election result, he said it was good news that a party that “proudly and openly betrayed its country” did not clear the 5 percent parliamentary threshold. On the president of DK, he said Fidesz had been working since 2004 to ensure that Ferenc Gyurcsany plays a decreasing role on the left and his position has finally weakened.

Assessing the result of the European parliamentary election, Gulyás said that on the whole, he could see a shift to the right, but warned that the sovereigntist forces had not yet gained a majority. He said it would be desirable if the sovereigntists could form a party group within the European Parliament, but added that was still questionable.

He said it would become clear in a few weeks which party group Fidesz could join in the European Parliament.

Among the European Conservatives and Reformers, the majority would welcome Fidesz, he said, noting that they had wanted Fidesz to join already after it left the European People’s Party. “It was our decision to try to create a larger right-wing alliance and this still remains our goal but it may not be successful,” he said.

On the election result of the party of French president Emmanuel Macron, Gulyás said that those with the most pro-war position suffered the biggest defeat. It seems the French public could not identify with the plan of sending French soldiers to Ukraine, he said.

Gulyás said the spotlight would come off Hungary if “we joined the supporters of war, opened our borders to migration and were willing to hold gender briefings in kindergartens,” but the government is not willing to do these.

Fielding a question on possible cooperation between Fidesz and Germany’s AfD, he said such a possibility had not even been suggested.

On the European People’s Party, he cited the EPP’s “pro-war position” as the main criticism. It seems the EPP evaluates the election result as a success, partly rightfully so, he said, adding that the EPP was looking for cooperation with the left and the liberals.

Gulyás said it was inconceivable that the Tisza Party could sit in the same party group, the EPP, with KDNP, the junior member of the governing Fidesz-KDNP alliance, in the European Parliament. He said this could happen in two ways: either Tisza is not accepted by the EPP or KDNP leaves the group.

He emphasised that Fidesz had no plans to cooperate with Tisza in the Budapest City Council.

On the composition of the City Council and the ability to obtain the majority necessary for passing the budget, for example, he said there were many parties that won enough votes to send deputies into the City Council and some of these had loose party affiliations, so it could be expected that there could still be many changes in the assembly and it would not be impossible at all to obtain a majority for a budget.

On Fidesz-KDNP’s candidate for Budapest mayor, he said Alexandra Szentkiralyi wished to continue to work on the affairs of Budapest in future so she was expected to become the leader of Fidesz’s group in the City Council. On Szentkiralyi’s withdrawal from the race, he said she had withdrawn voluntarily and unilaterally and Dávid Vitézy could rightly say that he had not asked for this and did not owe the governing parties anything.

Gulyás assessed Budapest mayor Gergely Karácsony’s performance in the past five years as a complete failure, he said Vitézy could only do better in comparison.

He said they did not plan to limit the powers of the mayors who were defeated in the municipal elections before their successors take office in October, and this would not be constitutional anyway.

Concerning Ilaria Salis’s winning a mandate in the EP, Gulyás said the election of the antifa activist, a “common law criminal” being prosecuted for violent acts in Budapest “does not present a too positive image of Italian democracy and part of their voters”. He said if the EP suspended the immunity of its new member, the proceedings could be continued against her; should the EP fail to do so, the proceedings will be interrupted.

Asked about Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s earlier remarks calling for “occupying Brussels” in the light of the EP election’s results, Gulyás said “we have set foot; we have not occupied it yet, but we are in” adding that “perhaps at least another EP election will be needed” to complete “the great military manoeuvre”.

Concerning Hungary’s upcoming EU presidency, Gulyás said it would give increased focus to the community’s competitiveness, agricultural and cohesion policies as well as to demographic challenges.

Referring to a visit by the NATO chief to Budapest on Wednesday, Gulyás said Jens Stoltenberg’s talks with the prime minister had yielded “maximum results” as “Hungary could maintain its “pro-peace position”. He said NATO was mulling training troops for the war and providing equipment to them, but “the military mission would probably not end there and those participating in it will be obliged to contribute to common defence under (NATO’s) Article 5, which could involve armed operations outside the country,” Gulyás said.

Without a fast peace agreement, NATO will under its Ukrainian mission “enter Ukraine’s western parts possibly as a peace keeper”, Gulyás said but insisted that “Hungary will not participate”. He also said, however, that if Russia should attack another NATO country on its own territory “and the conflict is not linked to NATO’s Ukraine mission, Hungary will participate in that.”

“Hungary’s NATO membership is a good thing and the government does not want to quit; Hungary … is meeting its NATO commitments,” Gulyás said, but added, however, that “NATO has overstepped the boundaries a defence alliance should not cross”.

Gulyás excluded the possibility of sending Lynx armoured vehicles, manufactured also in Hungary, to Ukraine “in the foreseeable future”.

He said “there is no sign” of other NATO members staying away from the Ukraine mission, adding that Stoltenberg’s Wednesday agreement would be binding for the next NATO chief, too. He also said Wednesday’s talks had not touched upon Stoltenberg’s successor. “If the other members insist on Dutch PM Mark Rutte, he will have to do something to get Hungary’s support,” Gulyás added.

Asked if Hungary would refrain from vetoing the EU’s decisions concerning Ukraine after its agreement with NATO, Gulyás said “the two things are not connected”.

Gulyás was also asked when Hungarian troops would be sent to Chad. He said there wasn’t any “exact timetable” prepared. He said talks were underway “aimed at having a (Hungarian) military mission in Chad”.

Asked about Hungary’s recent repurchasing majority ownership in Budapest Liszt Ferenc International Airport, Gulyás said the national economy ministry and the owners would provide information about the project in early July. He said the objective was to build a new terminal with the aim to increase the number of foreign tourists to over 20 million, adding that “with a well-developed infrastructure including a fast train service between the city and the airport, the goal of even 30 million visitors can be achieved”. Gulyás said that at times of war, posing a national security risk “it is reassuring” to have the a majority ownership in the airport.

Asked whether further plans still involved selling 29 percent of the airport to investors from Qatar, Gulyás said “the ownership structure is currently not like that.”

“The state part of the transaction will be closer to the ranges of 1,000 billion forints,” he added.

Speaking about restoring the balance of the central budget, Gulyás said the word austerity “is not included in the government’s vocabulary”.

Asked to comment on the recent weakening of the forint, he noted “a hectic volatility of the euro-forint exchange rate”, adding that “a return to economic growth will in the long term ensure that such hectic changes should not occur at all or occur only a lot less frequently”.

Commenting on the recent resignation of the culture and innovation minister, Gulyás said it was not related to the elections. He said the prime minister had not planned any further reshuffle in the cabinet.

Regarding the European import duties imposed on Chinese electric vehicles and opposed by Hungary, Gulyás said that “Europe will not win but loose on the whole issue, if China introduces similar duties”.

Asked about the planned national vaccine production plant in Debrecen, he said it was in the ownership of Debrecen University and “will be completed soon” in the city in eastern Hungary.

Speaking about the upcoming peace conference on Ukraine to be held by Switzerland, Gulyás said Hungary would be represented by the foreign minister.

Asked about the possibility of a meeting between the Ukrainian president and the Hungarian prime minister, he said “it will not be on the agenda as long as no results can be expected from it”.

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Budapest mayoral candidate of Fidesz promises clean, organised Budapest

alexandra szentkirályi budapest mayoral candidate

“I promise that if I become mayor, this capital city will see progress, and rid itself of its debilitating traffic chaos, with clean and organised public spaces awaiting us,” Alexandra Szentkirályi, the ruling Fidesz party’s candidate for mayor of Budapest, said on Wednesday.

Szentkirályi told a press conference in City Park that in the coming days and weeks, she would talk more about the capital’s affairs, her own plans for the city and work to end the coalition of incumbent mayor Gergely Karácsony and Democratic Coalition leader Ferenc Gyurcsány.

She praised the government’s Liget project that has transformed City Park into a cultural venue over the past ten years. Szentkirályi noted that the developments had added more than a quarter of a million square metres of green spaces to the area, tore down 72,000 sqms of paved surfaces, and added more than 500 deciduous trees, 130 pine trees, almost 70,000 shrubs and more than 700,000 perennials.

“I think that every day Budapest residents visit City Park, they vote with their feet in saying that this was a good investment, a good project,” Szentkirályi said.

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Probe launched into suspected foreign financing attempt in Hungary

corruption foreign network financing

Hungary’s Sovereignty Protection Office on Thursday said it is launching an investigation into a suspected attempt at foreign financing of an election.

Foreign financing of election?

The office said in a statement that it decided to launch its investigation based on information published in Thursday’s edition of the daily Magyar Nemzet.

The Sovereignty Protection Office said it had reason to suspect that “foreign and Hungarian interests” that had attempted to influence the 2022 general elections and “played an active role” in several European Union campaigns were “once again targeting the Hungarian elections”.

It said several criminal proceedings were underway against the members of the network of companies suspected of being involved in the case.

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Government official: Orbán, Trump adhere to same values, interests

trump orbán 2024

Adhering to the same conservative values could further strengthen cooperation between the Hungarian prime minister and Donald Trump, Zoltán Kovács, state secretary for international communication and relations, said on Monday, after Viktor Orbán meets with the former US president and Republican presidential candidate, in Florida on the weekend.

Those shared values include their commitment to peace, their approach to migration and the LGBTQ issue, the “sanctity of the family”, and their economic policy, Kovács told public news channel M1 on Monday morning.

He said Trump had proven as president that he was “the president of peace,” who, if elected, would urge peaceful solutions to the wars and conflicts.

Concerning the war in Ukraine, Kovács noted that Trump, just like the Hungarian government, had been an advocate for peace ever since the war broke out with Russia.

Commenting on incumbent US President Joe Biden’s remark that Trump was meeting a politician who “doesn’t think democracy works,” Kovács noted that Hungarian-US relations “work well”, adding that economic cooperation, Hungary’s commitment and its performance of responsibilities as a NATO member were “flawless”.

“The [current] ideology-driven US administration does not respect the opinion and the will of the Hungarian people,” he said.

Speaking to public broadcaster Kossuth Radio’s morning programme, Kovács said that “as Hungary is in the fourteenth year of a model change, the country now gets a lot more attention in the international press and in the United States”. Commenting on the Hungarian prime minister’s meeting with Donald Trump in Mar-a-Lago on Friday, Kovács said “the quality of personal relationships is highly important in politics”. Details HERE: Orbán and Trump: peacemakers meeting in Mar-a-Lago, Florida – PHOTOS, VIDEO

  • read also: Would the majority of Hungarians be happy if Trump won? – Survey

Hungarian FM to Breitbart: Trump presidency will ensure ‘new world order’ of global ‘peace, stability’

trump szijjártó us hungary foreign minister

The world “needs President Trump to win” this coming election because only a “strong” American leader can offer “stability and security to the international order”, the Hungarian foreign minister said in an interview with the website of Breitbart News.

In the interview published on Sunday, Péter Szijjártó said that if Donald Trump was elected in November, he would be able to make peace between Russia and Ukraine.

“Without President Trump on board, this war will continue for a long time, resulting in many more casualties and culminating in much destruction,” the minister said. “So our foremost hope is that in the case that President Trump wins the 2024 election, he can make peace.”

“We Hungarians give our full support to that as one of the very few countries in Europe which is pro-peace,” he added. “You have to understand that the majority of countries in Europe are pro-war, and just a tiny minority are pro-peace.”

Szijjártó said that if Trump’s “pro-peace policies” take effect, “then some of those European countries might change their positions as well”.

He said there was “no battlefield solution” to the war in Ukraine, adding that the battlefield “can only offer casualties and destruction — not a solution.”

Szijjártó said it was generally acknowledged that Ukraine would not defeat Russia, adding, at the same time, that “we also know that Russia cannot win against the entire west” either.

Concerning the war in Gaza, he said European countries applied “double standards” to Israel.

“[We] Believe that it must not be forgotten how this conflict started,” Szijjártó said. “There was a brutal, heinous terrorist attack taking place against Israel, with the firing of thousands of rockets into the country, the killing of over a thousand people, and the kidnapping of hundreds more.”

He said Israel’s military offensive against Hamas was of vital importance not just for the security of the Jewish state, but for global security as well, to prevent similar attacks across the globe.

The interview was made after Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán along with Szijjártó as member of his delegation travelled to Florida to meet the former US president. We wrote about this meeting here: Orbán and Trump: peacemakers meeting in Mar-a-Lago, Florida – PHOTOS, VIDEO

Hungary “has many friends” in the United States, Balázs Orbán, the prime minister’s political director, said in an interview to public radio on Sunday, in connection with Viktor Orbán’s meeting with Donald Trump in the former US president’s residence Mar-a-Lago, in Florida, details HERE.

Searching unassailable leadership: A look at potential candidates for head of state

Hungary Kossuth Square parliament 2023

The aftermath of the recent scandal precipitates the urgent need for the state to select a new head of state. Despite the president of the republic’s resignation, announced merely two days ago amidst a pardon scandal, public opinion on the next potential leader is already under survey through a telephone poll initiated since Thursday.

The government’s decision to implement a popularity and name recognition index for potential candidates indicates their commitment to securing the upcoming election’s outcome, especially in light of past instances where two out of three nominated presidents faced difficulties. In conjunction with the telephone survey, the Government is set to launch a comprehensive large-sample survey on the prospective head of state, gathering personal inquiries starting from Monday. Furthermore, there is a growing pressure within Fidesz membership for clarity surrounding the abrupt absence of their respected female politicians, Katalin Novák and Judit Varga according to Index.

New Head of State candidates

Insider reports indicate that Viktor Orbán is leaning away from considering a female candidate for the presidency, instead favouring qualities akin to János Áder, the former head of state, whose leadership was steadfast, despite lacking in charisma. Frustration among Fidesz’s leadership mounts as two out of three supported heads of state have faltered. Here are the potential candidates identified through the popularity survey:

  • Tibor Navracsics, Minister of Regional Development
  • Kristóf Szalay-Bobrovniczky, Minister of Defence
  • Béla Merkely, Rector of Semmelweis University
  • István Stumpf, former cabinet minister in charge of the Prime Minister’s Office
  • László Trócsányi, former Minister of Justice

Strengths and weaknesses of potential candidates

Sources within the government indicate that Kristóf Szalay-Bobrovniczky’s personality traits and forthcoming initiatives position him as a viable candidate for the head of state role. Surrounded by escalating geopolitical tensions, especially because of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, his experience as the defence minister is particularly suited to meet the challenges of these turbulent times. However, his transition from the business world to politics raises concerns, as his past in business may expose vulnerabilities that could be exploited by critics in the future.

Szalay-Bobrovniczky Kristóf
Source: Facebook/Szalay-Bobrovniczky Kristóf

Tibor Navracsics, much like Katalin Novák, is a seasoned politician familiar with the intricacies of Brussels politics. Known for his lack of scandals and amiable nature, he serves as a constructive force within the government. However, he may not enjoy widespread popularity among domestic voters. Additionally, his expertise remains indispensable for the government’s legal and political interactions with Brussels.

Navracsics Tibor
Source: Facebook/Navracsics Tibor

Béla Merkely, Rector of Semmelweis University, renowned for his contributions during the COVID-19 epidemic and recipient of the Széchenyi Prize for his medical achievement, presents a compelling candidacy for the head of state position. However, his involvement in party videos may become a source of ridicule, potentially detracting from his candidacy.

Dr. Merkely Béla
Source: Facebook/ Dr. Merkely Béla

István Stumpf, a former constitutional judge emerges as another potential candidate. Notably, his mentorship has played a pivotal role in the development of several prominent Fidesz politicians, such as Viktor Orbán and Jószef Szájer. However, his reputation as a vocal critic could pose a disadvantage. László Trócsányi has previously been floated as a potential candidate, but he was assigned to a different role by the cabinet. In 2022, there was a speculation about his candidacy to replace János Áder as Head of State; however, Fidesz ultimately nominated Katalin Novák. According to the legislation, László Kövér will serve as the interim Head of State until the election which is scheduled for March.

Read also:

Here is what comes after the Hungarian President resigned – HERE

Hungarian President resigns after pardoning paedophile helper – HERE

Exit poll: Aliyev wins the presidential election in Azerbaijan, Orbán congratules – UPDATE

Azerbaijan presidential election, 2024. Photo: Daily News Hungary ©

Today, the Caucasus region witnessed the unfolding of a historic election. Following decades of Armenian rule in Nagorno-Karabakh, which has since been reclaimed by Azerbaijan, the stage was set for the first presidential elections in the reunified nation.

Seven presidential candidates, including five representing political parties and two independent candidates, vied for the electorate’s favour in the early presidential polls. Unsurprisingly, all eyes were on the incumbent head of state, Ilham Aliyev, with many anticipating that the successful reunification would bolster his standing.

After Azeri forces successfully stabilised the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, it was decided in December 2023 to bring forward the elections from their originally scheduled date in 2025 to February 2024.

Azerbaijan presidential election, 2024. Photo: Daily News Hungary ©
Azerbaijan presidential election, 2024. Photo: Daily News Hungary ©

Election highlights in figures:

  • In a country the size of Hungary, 6.5 million voters exercised their democratic right.
  • 1,000 polling stations was established, with the presence of 90,000 domestic and 600 international observers on the ground.
  • 26 polling stations were set up in Nagorno-Karabakh.
  • The event garnered international attention, drawing 109 journalists from around the globe, including our own editor-in-chief.
  • Additionally, voting was made accessible abroad, with 49 locations across 40 countries, expecting approximately 23 thousand voters at embassies.

In a nod to transparency, webcams were installed at each polling station, allowing interested individuals to monitor proceedings online.

Exit poll result: Aliyev wins

exit poll
Azerbaijan presidential election, 2024. Photo: Daily News Hungary ©

Polling stations closed at 7.00 p.m. local time, and according to exit polls surveying 63 thousand voters, Ilham Aliyev emerged victorious with an overwhelming 93.9% of the vote. With a solid rapport with the Hungarian Government, Aliyev is poised to continue leading the energy-rich nation for another term.

Results – exit poll:

1. President Ilham Aliyev 93.9%

2. Zahid Oruj 1.8%

3. Fazil Mustafa 1.5%

4. Gudrat Hasanguliyev 1.2%

5. Razi Nurullayev 0.9%

6. Elshad Musayev 0.4%

7. Fuad Aliyev 0.3%

You can read this article in Hungarian here.

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Turnout

According to official figures, Azerbaijanis took the election seriously, with a very high turnout of 76.7 percent.

Orbán congratulates

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán congratulated the re-elected President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev by telephone. Mr Orbán wished him success in his presidency for the development of Azerbaijan.

The President of Azerbaijan thanked Mr Orban for his congratulations.

According to Azertac, during the telephone conversation, they praised the successful development of bilateral relations in various fields and expressed confidence that bilateral relations will continue to strengthen.

Fidesz politician: Legality of Serbia elections can’t be questioned

Zsolt Németh Member of Parliament in Washington

Possible irregularities that may have been experienced in Serbia’s early parliamentary elections this month did not reach a level that would warrant questioning the legitimacy of the vote, the head of the Hungarian parliament’s foreign affairs committee said in Strasbourg on Monday.

Zsolt Németh told MTI by phone on day one of the winter session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) that it would be “preferable if certain political forces didn’t question the legitimacy of the vote in Serbia just because it was won by a political side that they don’t sympathise with”.

He praised the recent achievements of the CoE, namely the relations it has fostered with the opposition in Russia and Belarus as well as its contributions to the representation of human and minority rights in Ukraine despite the war.

He said that without the CoE’s contributions, it would have been impossible to achieve “even the relative improvement” that has been Ukraine’s amendment of its minority law. He added that while the amendment was “an important step in an encouraging direction”, it was not enough, and more efforts would need to be made to restore the rights of Transcarpathian Hungarians and other national minorities in Ukraine.

Read also:

Concerning the Israel-Palestine conflict, Németh said it was “regrettable” that the Hamas terrorist group’s attack on Israel could not have been prevented, that there was no progress in ending the war, and that anti-Semitism was on the rise again in Europe.

Meanwhile, Németh said he was hopeful of good cooperation with newly-elected PACE President Theodoros Roussopoulos based on the new president’s inaugural speech on Monday. He said he had supported Roussopoulos in the hope that the new president would be a partner in the enforcement of human and minority rights norms.

Németh also told MTI that he had been re-elected deputy leader of PACE’s conservative group.

VIDEO: Trump hailed Prime Minister Orbán as a “great leader”

Trump Manchester

Former US President Donald Trump hailed Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán as a “great leader” and a “strong man” at a campaign rally in Manchester, New Hampshire, on 20 January.

Trump in Machester

“There is a great man, a great leader in Europe – Viktor Orbán,” Trump said.

“He is the prime minister of Hungary. He is a very great leader, a very strong man. Some people don’t like him because he’s too strong.”

 

  • read also: Hungary is to host Trump’s favourite event again, details HERE

Orbán-Trump relation in the past

The good relationship between Viktor Orbán and Donald Trump began several years ago. In 2016, the Hungarian prime minister was the first sitting leader to urge support for Donald Trump in the US presidential election campaign. Orbán finally received an invitation from then President Trump in 2019, so they met officially in Washington, but the US President did not visit Hungary during his term of office.

Instead of the usual diplomacy, Orbán opted for a confrontational strategy after Trump’s downfall, as the Hungarian prime minister continues to stand by Trump in clear defiance of the Biden administration. They have praised each other for the past couple of years, and Orbán has recently said that

the war in Ukraine could be solved if Trump is elected president.

He believes that the return of the former Republican president is the key to peace.

 

“Viktor Orbán, the most respected man— probably the toughest man in Europe, maybe beyond Europe”, former President Donald Trump said in Iowa, details here.

Hungarian foreign minister: 2024 is the Super Bowl of politics

Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó on Monday said the government would continue to represent Hungarian interests “and not give in to blackmail, even though 2024 will be a crucial year, and we know the pressure will be enormous.”

Szijjarto called 2024 “the Super Bowl of politics” on Facebook on Monday. “Never before have 78 countries held elections in the span of one year, directly impacting nearly 4 billion people worldwide,” he added.

Hungarian citizens will vote in the European parliamentary elections, but hundreds of millions will go to the urns in the US, Russia, India, Mexico and the UK, he said.

“From our point of view, the US and EU elections are particularly important, as they raise the hope of replacing war, weapon deliveries and senseless human sacrifice with brokering peace,” he said.

Hungary will fight “to open Brussels’s eyes” to give the EU an opportunity to correct its errors in leadership, he said. As we wrote today, Balázs Orbán, the prime minister’s political director said exactly the same strategy here.

Szijjártó said this year’s events would see a new world order take shape, “so it will take larger efforts than ever to guarantee the physical and economic security of the country, so that Hungary can belong among the winners of that new era.”

“The international liberal mainstream has always exerted enormous pressure on us, but we prevailed, and it always turned out to have been the right choice,” he said.

Transparency of elections to be ensured in Hungary

Election Voting

Hungary’s new Sovereignty Protection Office will be tasked to ensure transparency of the upcoming local and European Parliament elections and the pre-election campaign as “its first major task”, Tamás Lánczi, appointed to head the new body, to be set up before 2 February, told public television on Tuesday.

The new body will aim to “protect the country’s economic, cultural, communication and political identity and independence,” Lánczi said, adding that “the office will not be an authority having primarily analytic and fact-finding tasks.” The office “will not launch probes or impose sanctions,” he added.

The office will cooperate with other agencies and “make possible violations public and report to the respective state organs,” he said, adding that the office could “call the attention of lawmakers to any legal deficiency or the need for an authority to act”.

For example, Lánczi said recipients of illegal party financing could face imprisonment but “the punishment will not be imposed by the office but by the respective state authority”.

The new office will be tasked to “prevent foreign attempts to influence the elections and if seeing signs of such activities it will alert the authorities,” he said.

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Serbian elections 2023: Vučić’s party wins, Hungarian party remains in government

Serbia parliamentary election 2023 VMSZ Hungarians

Early parliamentary elections were held in Serbia, where the Hungarian Association of Vojvodina (VMSZ) will have at least as many seats as before.

The ruling right-wing Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) of President Aleksandar Vučić is in the lead in a snap parliamentary election, Reuters said. According to projections by the pollsters, the SNS won 47 percent of the vote and is expected to hold about 130 seats in the 250-member assembly.

The second largest party, Serbia Against Violence (SPN) alliance, a centrist coalition won only about 23 percent of votes, according to the projections.

VMSZ has been a huge success

We have at least as many votes and seats as in the previous election, which means that we have achieved our electoral goals, and I can say that the Hungarian Association of Vojvodina (VMSZ) has won, Bálint Pásztor, acting president of the Hungarian Association of Vojvodina, stressed at a press conference late on Sunday.

Pásztor stressed that the party’s goal was to keep its independent parliamentary group in the Belgrade parliament – which requires five MPs – and that it had achieved this goal according to all preliminary results.

He pointed out that the VMSZ had managed to stay strong after a difficult period, following the death of party president István Pásztor. He said that many people expected the party to disintegrate after such a tragedy, but this was not the case, the party remained united and strong, and the Hungarians of Vojvodina supported the party.

The Hungarian Association of Vojvodina has been a member of the ruling coalition since 2014 and expects to continue to play such a role in the coming period. It intends to participate in government work at the level of state secretary.

In addition to early parliamentary elections in Serbia, provincial elections were also held in Vojvodina (Vajdaság). In the province of Vojvodina, the VMSZ has the third largest parliamentary group, ahead of several other Serbian parties. Only the list of the Serbian Progressive Party and the opposition list Serbia Against Violence were ahead of the Hungarian Association of Vojvodina.

Bálint Pásztor thanked the Hungarian government and Fidesz for the support they had given the VMSZ during the campaign.

Foreign minister Péter Szijjártó was speaking at the campaign closing event of the ethnic Hungarian VMSZ, details HERE.

Read more news about Serbia Serbia HERE.

Deputy PM congratulates VMSZ on election success

Deputy Prime Minister Zsolt Semjén congratulated on behalf of the Hungarian government the Hungarian Association of Vojvodina (VMSZ) on its success at the Serbian elections in a post late on Sunday.

The Hungarian government is a strong ally of the current Serbian government in the region, and the cooperation between Vučić and Orbán is expected to continue.

Potápi hails ethnic Hungarian party’s success in Serbia election

The Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians (VMSZ) had achieved a “great and shining” victory in Serbia’s recent general election, Árpád János Potápi, the prime ministerial state secretary for Hungarian communities abroad, said on Monday, adding that VMSZ had become “the most successful ethnic Hungarian party in the Carpathian Basin.

VMSZ has proved in the past 32 years that “the Hungarian community must have a single ethnic party” in a given country, Potápi told an event. He highlighted the efforts of VMSZ activists in the election campaign, “reaching out practically to each and every Hungarian” in Vojvodina, adding that the ethnic party had retained its earlier position in Serbia’s parliament.

Bálint Pásztor, the acting leader of VMSZ, said his party had garnered 62,000 votes, which translates into six seats in parliament.

Hungary to set up Sovereignty Protection Office

Lawmakers on Tuesday approved the law on protecting national sovereignty that paves the way for establishing the Sovereignty Protection Office.

The bill submitted by ruling party MPs was passed with 140 votes in favour and 50 against.

According to the law’s preamble, unlawful attacks against Hungary’s sovereignty are becoming increasingly common, with foreign entities attempting to gain influence in Hungary to enforce their own interests against those of Hungary. The preamble cites the millions of US dollars in campaign donations received by the left-wing opposition ahead of the 2022 general election.

The bill says that political forces dependent on foreign entities gaining power would harm Hungary’s sovereignty and pose a national security risk.

It says it is necessary to set up an independent body uncovering foreign influence operations, as well as to introduce criminal sanctions for accepting foreign campaign donations.

The Sovereignty Protection Office will be established in line with a constitutional amendment proposal approved by MPs on Tuesday (with 135 in favour, 34 against and 6 abstentions). The new autonomous state administration authority will be involved in assessment activities and making proposals.

It will be tasked with investigating organisations whose activities funded from abroad may influence the outcome of the elections.

The head of the office will be appointed by the President of the Republic at the proposal of the prime minister for a six-year term, starting on February 1, 2024.

The office’s task is to analyse information submitted by organisations under investigation with a view to determining whether national sovereignty is enforced, and to recommend measures and legislation aimed at protecting Hungary’s sovereignty. The office will also carry out and finance research activities.

The office will have to compile an annual sovereignty report by June 30 which includes a sovereignty risk analysis.

Its tasks also include uncovering any interest representation or disinformation activity carried out in the interest of other states or foreign organisations, as well as activities aiming to influence decision-making by the state and society. It will also be responsible for identifying and investigating organisations that receive support from abroad for the purpose of influencing the elections.

The Penal Code has also been amended, stating that a candidate or member of the organisation nominating them that made use of foreign money or gained a financial advantage by concealing the origin of the prohibited foreign funding is criminally liable and faces up to three years in prison.

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Right to vote will be linked to literacy in Hungary?

Viktor Orbán casting his ballot

The Mi Hazánk party wants the right to vote to be linked to the ability to read and write, the party’s deputy head said on Monday.

Előd Novák told a press conference that “for parties committing election fraud, it is easiest to buy the votes of those who can’t read or write.”

While Mi Hazánk has no intention of excluding anyone from the elections because of their ethnicity, “this problem may affect Gypsies in Hungary the most”, he said.

The radical party would also take steps against buying votes and bussing voters to ballot stations, among other methods, he said.

The proposal would also ban dual citizens from running for office in Hungary, he said.

Under the proposal, constituents could recall lawmakers and MPs’ immunity would be scrapped.

Further, the president would be elected directly, prime ministerial candidates would have to hold open debates, and all parties would be obligated to write a manifesto, Novák said.

Also, the media authority should be manned by government and opposition delegates in equal numbers, he said.

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