Orban to Skip Parliamentary Seat After Fidesz Election Defeat, Seeks Party Leadership
Outgoing Hungarian PM says he is not needed in parliament but will lead nationalist 'renewal' as party leader
En resumen
- Hungary's outgoing Prime Minister Viktor Orban says he will not take up his parliamentary seat following Fidesz's landslide defeat in this month's election, but will seek re-election as party leader at its June congress to lead a process of 'renewal' of the nationalist side.
- The dominant figure in Hungarian politics since 1989, Orban served as premier for 16 years and was the only EU leader maintaining close ties to Putin, having delayed an EU loan to Ukraine with his veto.
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Viktor Orban has been the dominant figure in Hungarian politics since the fall of communism in 1989, serving as premier for the past 16 years. He was the only EU leader maintaining close ties with Russian President Putin and used Hungary's veto to delay EU financial support to Ukraine.
Hungary's outgoing Prime Minister Viktor Orban said he would not take up his seat in parliament following his party's landslide defeat in this month's election but wants to stay on as Fidesz's leader to lead a process of "renewal".
The most dominant figure in Hungarian politics since the fall of Communism in 1989, Orban has sat in Hungary's legislature for 36 years without interruption, serving as premier for the past sixteen years. "I'm not needed in parliament now but in the reorganisation of the nationalist side," said Orban, who held the No 1 slot on his Fidesz party's candidate list. He added that he would seek re-election as party leader at its June congress.
Fidesz's defeat was hailed by many liberals and progressives as evidence that the wave of right-wing populism that has swept across the US and much of Europe had peaked. Backed by US President Donald Trump, Orban was the only European Union leader still nurturing close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin and wielded his veto to delay an EU loan to Ukraine.
Orban has in the past stepped back to re-emerge as an even more powerful figure. When his previous one-term government was defeated in 2002, he gave up the party leadership to rally his conservative base into a new alliance, at the head of which he returned to government eight years later.
Qué observar
Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos
Orban will be re-elected as Fidesz party leader at June congress
Probable · En meses
New Hungarian government will align more closely with EU Ukraine policy
Probable · En meses
Preguntas abiertas
- Who will form the new Hungarian government?
- What will be the policy direction on Ukraine?
- Will Orban actually succeed in remaining Fidesz leader?

