Orban Versus Magyar: What Happened? 

Viktor Orban wasn’t as good as many believe, and Peter Magyar may be better than many people expect.

 

Viktor Orban, the valiant populist, the restorer of the Christian faith in Hungary, the welcome thorn in the side of the EU Establishment, and the strong ally of President Trump since his first bid for office, has lost his own re-election bid. I had a feeling it would come to this.

Sixteen years of uninterrupted administration as a strong force for conservative, right-wing nationalist populism have come to an end, at least under Orban’s leadership.

Sometimes, voters have a strange fatigue when it comes to governments. Fourteen years of a “Conservative” UK government ushered in the Labour Party in 2024. However, fatigue doesn’t explain Orban’s crushing loss.

What set that off?

Corruption charges and the argument that his administration had looked the other way when sex abuse scandals broke out at a local school.

Economics also reared its ugly head when the EU cut off its funding. Orban’s supposed lack of judicial reforms, as well as his uniform check on EU policy, frustrated Brussels.

Orban faced a crisis election, and inviting US VP JD Vance to campaign on his behalf didn’t help.

Why would Hungarian voters care what a foreign politician thinks? This desperate move only exacerbated how out of touch the Orban government had become. Critics also saw him as too close to Russian “president” Vladimir Putin and unhelpful in resolving the Russo-Ukrainian war. The EU had been waiting for this opportunity: an unpopular Orban facing electoral collapse.

They were salivating for a post-Orban Hungary, one that would stop its Christian restorationism, welcome more LGBT promotion, tolerate more spending, and open its borders.

Would the Orban replacement accomplish their scheme?

His challenger, Peter Magyar, was trained and prepped as an Orban acolyte.

In 2024, he broke from his party, but not over core policy. Magyar (whose name means “Hungarian,” for what it’s worth) campaigned to end corruption and restore good government in Hungary. He campaigned to the right of Orban, calling for an end to importing cheap labor into the country. He campaigned on cracking down harder on immigration—illegal and mass—than the incumbent!

His message, if anyone was listening, wasn’t pro-EU. He was still asking, “What about us Hungarians?”

Supporters of the cultural restoration Right thought that Orban was not getting the job done. Was he failing?

On April 12, 2026, Magyar’s Tisza Party swept the elections, securing a supermajority of up to 140 of 199 seats. Orban won 56 seats, and another far-right party won the rest.

Sure, EU progressive elites celebrate Orban’s loss, as did Barack Obama and George Soros. They view Orban’s downfall as a harbinger of the end of Republican hegemony in Washington later this year.

Yet look again at the results of the Hungarian parliamentary elections. I mentioned three parties that won seats: three right-wing parties. Not one left-wing or centrist element came to power or won seats. A minimum threshold of five percent in the election results is required for a party to place. The left was shut out of the Hungarian parliament.

The Right Wing won Hungary. Orban may have lost his premiership, but Orbanism is standing strong.

This election focused on personalities, not principles.

Magyar is just as socially conservative as Orban. He has already pledged to end the foreign permit workers. He wants to give Hungarians abroad a chance to return to their home country and thrive again. That’s about as “Hungary First” as it gets!

Magyar has already stated that he will not support fast-tracking Ukraine’s membership into the EU. Huge move for ending the Russo-Ukrainian war!

He announced a diversification plan for energy. Instead of relying predominantly on Russia, he wants to draw oil from the South and the West, as well. This sounds like real economic freedom for Hungary. National populism is great, but it must face economic realities. Too many right-wing populist governments are shoveling out money to voters for school supplies, raising families, and pensions. Where is the money supposed to come from? More taxes?! From whom?

Right-wing socialism is still…socialism, and Orban had a problem here.

Eventually, the government runs out of others’ money, or inflation bites whatever purchasing power the government intended for the people. Inflation and tariff pressures weighed down Orban’s reelection chances.

Orban’s Hungary was still not the perfect social conservative paradise for other reasons. Prostitution is still legalAbortion is also still legal. While countries need to encourage their native populations to bear children, that vision will collapse in the face of easy sex and no responsibility. Cultural norms need reinforcement, with no tolerance for deviance.

Orban and his party imposed vaccine passports and health mandates during COVID. How is this good for the working public? Where is the freedom? Too much state-sponsored anything is bad for a country.

Even now, Hungarians cannot own a gun without passing strict major government demands. Czechia made self-defense a right, and in Switzerland everyone owns a gun (Though it’s registered with the state).

Throughout his tenure, Orban strengthened ties with China, joining the deceptive Belt and Road initiative. He even allowed Chinese police to operate in his country! American citizens voiced righteous outrage when the local press exposed former New York City mayor Eric Adams for allowing a CCP-run police station in the Big Apple. Yet no one on the Right complained about Orban allowing the CCP into Hungary? That’s wrong.

There’s room for improvement, and Magyar can exceed Orban’s victories while correcting his mistakes.

He is already doubling down on stopping mass migration!

He is committed to putting all Hungarians first and fighting for the rights of ethnic Hungarians in other countries.

Magyar must revive and restore Hungary’s economy. One can hope he will place his country in a better position to profit without dependence and root out undue Chinese influence.

In a media masterstroke, he appeared on state television to discuss his plans for the country. Without missing a beat, he dressed down the reporter interviewing him, castigating the news organization for not allowing him on their program over the last year and a half. He then scolded them for lying about him and his family.

Then came the coup de grace: he announced his government plan to cut their funding and shut them down. Hungary needs honest independent media, he said, not government-funded agitprop that would inspire envy in Joseph Goebbels or North Korea.

He is not hostile to Putin, but he will not engage him aggressively either: sounds a lot like Trump!

He will not participate in the EU migration pact. He is keeping up the border fences, but he has also pledged to find a way for the EU to release the funds the country needs.

He is making inroads with his Slavic neighbors, including the more populist, nationalist leaders in Slovakia and Czechia

Magyar reminds me of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. He isn’t just talking the national populist talk. He is walking the walk, and he is sprinting ahead with major reforms.

Orban was T-800. Magyar may well be T-1000, and the EU Left is going to find that he will be worse for their globalist, leftist, secularist agenda.

 

Source: Orban Versus Magyar: What Happened? – American Thinker

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