NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
TrumpMajorMilitaryStrikesFebruaryIranAnnouncesIranianNewsAdditionalDigestSundayTimelineYearNuclearTargetingGameHumanoidGlobalMarketNipahLimitedChineseCampaign
TrumpMajorMilitaryStrikesFebruaryIranAnnouncesIranianNewsAdditionalDigestSundayTimelineYearNuclearTargetingGameHumanoidGlobalMarketNipahLimitedChineseCampaign
All Articles
DW News
Clustered Story
Published 7 days ago

Hungary: Magyar launches anti-Orban election campaign

DW News · Feb 15, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

Peter Magyar's opposition Tisza party is pledging to combat corruption in one of the European Union's poorest countries and reverse Budapest's pivot towards Russia.

Full Article

Hungarian opposition leader Peter Magyar launched his party's election campaign in Budapest on Sunday, vowing to end the 16-year rule of Prime Minister Viktor Orban, tackle corruption and reorientate Hungary back towards western Europe. Magyar, a former influential member of Orban's nationalist Fidesz party, took over leadership of the center-right Tisza party in 2024 and quickly established himself as the biggest challenge to Orban in over a decade. In June 2024, Tisza – which is an abbreviation of the Hungarian words for "respect" (tisztelet) and "freedom" (szabadsag) – won around 30% of the vote in European Parliament elections and most independent polls show it with a significant lead ahead of election day on April 12. "We're standing on the threshold of victory with 56 days left to go," Magyar told supporters in Budapest on Sunday. "Tisza stands ready to govern."Hungary: who is Peter Magyar? A 44-year-old former lawyer, Magyar has accused Orban's right-wing populist government of mismanaging Hungary's economy and social services, and of allowing corruption to run riot, leaving Hungary one of the poorest countries in the European Union. "Not only has the Hungarian economy not taken off; it has hit a dead end," he said. He has also criticized Orban's antagonism towards the EU and continuing proximity to Russian President Vladimir Putin despite Russia's ongoing invasion of neighboring Ukraine. After holding meetings with several European leaders at the Munich Security Conference (MSC) over the weekend, he said he would put an end to Hungary's "drift out of the European Union" under Orban. "Hungary's place is in Europe," he said. "Not only because Hungary needs Europe, but also because Europe needs Hungary." However, he also reiterated that a Tisza government would continue to oppose any accelerated Ukrainian accession to the EU and retain a border fence erected by Orban in 2015 as part of a continuation of anti-immigration policies.Hungarian opposition leader Peter Magyar met several European leaders at the Munich Security Conference this weekend, including Croatian Prime Minister Andrej PlenkovicImage: Vlada.hr Hungary: Magyar pledges to combat corruption Nevertheless, despite some EU-scepticism, Magyar has vowed to combat corruption and strengthen Hungary's democratic institutions and independent judiciary in order to regain access to billions of euros' worth of suspended EU funding. "It is time to call corruption what it is: theft," he said, promising "total transparency in contracts involving public funds" and the "recovery" of all the money Hungary "has been deprived of over 16 years." During the campaign so far, Magyar has specifically targeted Orban's traditional strongholds: small, conservative-leaning towns and villages across the country but far away from major cities like Budapest, focusing on bread and butter issues such as low wages and rapidly rising living costs. He has challenged Orban to a TV debate – thus far without response – saying the "outgoing prime minister" is only capable of "agitation" and "threats," accusing him of spying on opponents. "If they can search through my private life, then they can rummage through everyone's," said Magyar. Orban: work only 'half done' Opposition and rights groups regularly accuse Orban of silencing critical voices in the judiciary, academia and media, as well as cutting the rights of minority groups. Just this weekend, local authorities in Budapest once again permitted the staging of the annual neo-Nazi "Day of Honor" gathering while clamping down on small anti-fascist counter-demonstrations instead. The ruling Fidesz party hasn't published an official election manifesto, arguing that, after governing for 16 years, voters know what policies to expect. Orban on Saturday vowed to press on with a crackdown on what he called "pseudo-civil organizations, bought journalists, judges, politicians," saying his work was only "half done." Edited by: Louis Oelofse


Share this story

Read Original at DW News

Related Articles

France 244 days ago
Russia launches missiles, drones at Ukraine amid peace talks in Geneva

Russian forces launched aerial attacks on Ukraine overnight, the Ukrainian air force said Wednesday, ahead of a second day of negotiations between Kyiv and Moscow officials in Geneva. The Ukrainian air force said in a statement that Russian forces had launched one ballistic missile and deployed 126 attack drones in the barrage, adding that its air defence units had downed 100 unmanned aerial vehicles.

Politico Europe5 days ago
Berlin court tells X to hand over data on Hungarian election

Longtime leader Viktor Orbán faces fierce opposition from rival Péter Magyar in Hungary's vote.

Bloomberg5 days ago
Hungary Bond Rally Looks Frothy After Rubio’s Pledge, Aviva Says

Hungarian bonds extended gains after the latest US pledge of financial support for Prime Minister Viktor Orban, raising new questions about the sustainability of the rally, according to asset manager Aviva Investors.

baotintuc.vn5 days ago
Ngoại trưởng Mỹ công khai ủng hộ Thủ tướng Orban trước bầu cử Hungary

Published: 20260217T103000Z

budapesttimes.hu6 days ago
Orbán : A new golden age has dawned - The Budapest Times

Published: 20260217T053000Z

France 246 days ago
Rubio meeting 'did not produce any movement' on issues pushed by Orban

Speaking with FRANCE 24's Monte Francis, Marc Loustau, Affiliated Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study at Central European University, says that Monday's meeting between US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban 'did not produce the kind of movement that Orban would like to have had before the April elections' because US President Donald Trump 'is not very good at following up on his promises'.