Hungarian political newcomer says PM Orbán’s government can be replaced
EU election results will show Hungarians that Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s government can be replaced, political newcomer Péter Magyar said after a campaign rally on Saturday (7 June) attended by tens of thousands on the eve of the polls.
Sunday’s European Parliament election is the first such test for Magyar, an ex-government insider who turned against Orbán’s rule over what he said was corruption and state propaganda and burst onto Hungary’s political scene just four months ago, per Euractiv.
Latest surveys put support for Orbán’s right-wing Fidesz at 44% to 48% of the vote, with Magyar’s right-of-centre Tisza polling in a 23% to 29% range.
Whether his party gets 20% or 30% of the vote, “everyone will believe that the government can be replaced, even those who have not believed it until now”, Magyar said.
Although his name is the first on the Tisza party list, he does not intend to take up a seat in the European Parliament if elected, preferring to remain in Hungary and lay the groundwork to defeat Orbán in the next national election due in 2026.
Magyar said he will start building a party from what is now practically a “one-man-show”.
The 43-year-old lawyer said that his party’s European Parliament members will first concentrate on “bringing home” European Union funds for Hungary that are currently frozen, although the government has most of the tools to do so.
The EU has suspended a large chunk of funds for Hungary over concerns Budapest had damaged democratic checks and balances.
“That money is really needed, for small- and mid-sized enterprises, farmers, for the healthcare system and education,” he said.
His party would propose a mechanism that checks where EU funds are spent before, and not after they are paid, in order to prevent any misuse.
According to polls, Tisza can expect 6 or 7 seats in the European Parliament. Magyar said that Tisza’s MEPs will aim to join committees important for Hungarians such as agriculture, competitiveness, finance, environmental issues or healthcare.
“This is also why we are headed to the European People’s Party, because that is the biggest parliamentary group and that is where it is easiest to work for our interests,” Magyar said.
EPP leader Manfred Weber was quoted as saying by Politico this week that he would be “very glad” to cooperate with Magyar.