Will PM Orbán’s challenger lose immunity because of a cellphone?

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Public Prosecutor Péter Polt has turned to the President of the European Parliament, requesting lifting the immunity of MEP Péter Magyar, the leader of the opposition Tisza party, based on evidence that has surfaced against him in an investigation on suspicion of theft, the Public Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement on Thursday.

According to the details uncovered, Magyar accosted the alleged victim of the crime on June 21, when he noticed the victim was filming him with his mobile phone at a club. Magyar took the phone, refused to hand it back and denied having it, then dropped it in the Danube before multiple witnesses, including the phone’s owner, the prosecutor’s office said.

The phone was later recovered by the police and given back to the owner in good working condition, the office said. According to the statement, Magyar’s conduct had been in line with the legal definition of theft. Further clarification of the case and criminal proceedings would only be possible once the EP has lifted Magyar’s immunity, the statement said.

Péter Magyar in the European Parliament
Photo: FB/Magyar Péter

Magyar will not take up seat in Budapest Assembly

Péter Magyar, the leader of the opposition Tisza party, told public media on Thursday that he will not take up his seat in the Budapest Assembly. Magyar told public broadcaster Kossuth Rádió that he could not fulfil the mandate next to his other positions, as he is already working as an MEP, party leader and the organiser of the party’s “Tisza islands” movements.

In an interview with news channel M1, Magyar said he had invited every top candidate in the local elections for talks because “I feel the responsibility of the fact that Budapest citizens have elected ten party members into the assembly”. Apart from former Fidesz mayoral candidate Alexandra Szentkirályi, “who rejected the talks with a ridiculous, puerile excuse,” Magyar said he had talked to all of them.

Ursula von der Leyen, Péter Magyar and Zoltán Tarr
Ursula von der Leyen, Péter Magyar and Zoltán Tarr. Different levels of negotiations. Photo: FB/Péter Magyar

Regarding his talks with Gergely Karácsony, Magyar said he had warned the Budapest mayor of “a cozying up, a mating dance” with the government, insisting that “there is a coming closer, despite all propaganda to the contrary” between Budapest and the ruling parties. “Karácsony sometimes calls for Olympic Games [to be held in Budapest] louder than the prime minister and they were openly praising each other during the flood,” Magyar said.

People fed up with back door deals

Asked about statements that Tisza party members would stay away from nominating a deputy mayor and from sitting on the board of city-owned companies, Magyar said the party wanted to keep out of the “the corruption in the capital, conducted so far between the old left and Fidesz.”

Budapest’s current internal rules bestow all powers on the mayor, Magyar said, adding that it was not just Tisza that wanted to change this. He said they wanted councillors to also be able to submit amendment proposals and nominate or comment on the appointment of the heads of city-owned companies.

“People have had enough of the twenty-year-old back door deals between Orbán and [Democratic Coalition leader Ferenc] Gyurcsány,” Magyar said.

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2 Comments

  1. He won’t lose his EP immunity. Running for a seat in the European Parliament was the smartest thing for Magyar to do. Fidesz in its’ desperation to suppress all opposition would find anyway it could to manufacture a criminal case against him to get him off the political stage. Peter Magyar can now lead the Tisza Party all the way to the 2026 with some protection.

  2. I doubt anyone would dare film Orban in public and up close? Would be deemed as provocative, aggressive and an invasion of privacy…. and require getting past his security detail.

    Think Magyar is really putting the ‘frighteners’ on Orban and Fidesz, simply by having a public persona, is an MEP, both bypasses media and embarrasses the government (& other urban based opposition figures) by methodically going to regions highlighting issues of corruption, health care etc., which also compels some media to follow, and government then compelled to respond.

    To be fair, Fidesz like any other party or regime that has been in power, like the past and elsewhere, they become stale and too familiar ie. people become tired of seeing the same Ministers in media again and again…. older generations maybe think it’s normal, but not working age and youth….

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