Hungarians vote in landmark election closely watched by EU, Russia, US, Israel

BUDAPEST — Hungarians vote on Sunday in an election that could end Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s 16-year hold on power, rattle Russia and send shockwaves through right-wing circles across the West, including US President Donald Trump’s White House and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Orban, a eurosceptic nationalist, has carved out a model of an “illiberal democracy” seen as a blueprint by Trump’s Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement and its admirers in Europe.

But many Hungarians have grown increasingly weary of Orban, 62, after three years of economic stagnation and soaring living costs as well as reports of oligarchs close to the government amassing more wealth.

Opinion polls over the last two weeks have shown Orban’s Fidesz party trailing Peter Magyar’s upstart center-right opposition Tisza party by 7-9 percentage points, with Tisza at around 38-41 percent.

Voting in the election for the 199-seat parliament started at 6 a.m. local time (0400 GMT) and is due to close at 7 p.m.

The vote is being closely watched in Brussels, with many EU peers criticizing Orban, a friend of Russian President Vladimir Putin and a close Trump ally, over what they say is an erosion of Hungary’s democratic rule, media freedom and minority rights.

For Hungary’s eastern neighbor Ukraine, an Orban defeat could mean the unblocking of a 90-billion-euro ($105 billion) European Union loan vital for Kyiv’s war effort. It would also deprive Russia of its closest ally in the EU.

But Trump and Netanyahu are hoping for a win for their ally, with the Israeli leader heaping praise on Orban last month, and the US president saying Friday that he is ready to take steps to strengthen Hungary’s economy if Orban wins.

In a highly unusual move, Israel’s Ambassador to Singapore Eli Vered Hazan openly endorsed Orban in a post on X on Saturday, wishing him luck in the election and highlighting his support for Israel “unlike decadent European politicians,” Trump’s support for him, and his “saving Europe from itself.”

After the post drew much criticism, Vered Hazan deleted it.

Orban has cast the election as a choice between “war and peace.” During campaigning, the government blanketed the country with signs warning that Tisza leader Magyar would drag Hungary into Russia’s war with Ukraine, something he strongly denies.

“I am looking forward to Sunday’s election with the best hope,” Orban told supporters in his birthplace Szekesfehervar.

“If we know ourselves well, if we know our country well and if we know our own people well, then I must say Hungarians will vote for safety on Sunday,” he added.

Orban has won public endorsements from the Trump administration — culminating in a visit to Budapest by US Vice President JD Vance last week — as well as from the Kremlin and far-right leaders in Europe.

But his campaign has been shaken by media reports alleging that his government colluded with Moscow. Orban, who denies any wrongdoing, says his goal is to protect Hungary’s national identity and traditional Christian values within the EU and its security in a dangerous world.

Meanwhile, former Orban loyalist Magyar, 45, has tapped into discontent over alleged state corruption and falling living standards, with young voters particularly eager for change.

“I am very excited but also very scared,” said Kriszta Tokes, a 24-year-old who sells postcards and trinkets in Budapest. “I know that my future depends on this,” she said, adding that she plans to leave Hungary if Orban wins.

While Orban’s party has done good things “on paper,” Tokes said, referring to massive fiscal handouts he has provided to shore up support, she believed young people were struggling more than the government realized.

To address a popularity rating of just 8% among under-30s, Orban has scrapped income tax ​for the youngest workers and launched a subsidized mortgage scheme to help first-time buyers onto the housing ladder amid the EU’s steepest rise in house prices under his rule.

But Magyar’s offer of change appears to resonate more.

In a final push in the eastern town of Miskolc on Friday, Magyar said: “This will be a referendum… about our country’s place and our country’s future.”

Analysts caution that the outcome of the vote remains uncertain, citing the number of undecided voters, a redrawing of the electoral map in favor of Fidesz and a high proportion of ethnic Hungarians in neighboring countries, who mostly support the ruling party.

They say anything from a Tisza supermajority — able to change the constitution — to a Fidesz majority is possible.

If Tisza does win, unwinding the legal and institutional changes Orban has made may prove a daunting task for a new government if it has a simple majority in parliament.

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