BUDAPEST / BRUSSELS (Aftenposten): Just before midnight, Hungary’s controversial prime minister, Viktor Orban, declared that he had won the election and could embark on his fourth term in office.
—
The case is being updated
He is now the leader in Europe who has been in power the longest. The only element of uncertainty seems to be whether Orban and his party Fidesz will achieve a so-called “super majority”, ie a 2/3 majority.
Which gives the party the right to change the constitution.
- When 90 percent of the votes were counted, Fidesz was poised to get 134 representatives in parliament and 67 percent of the votes.
- The opposition was expected to get 28 percent and 57 representatives.
At the same time, opposition leader Peter Marki-Zay announced that he accepted Orban and Fidesz’s victory.
Disappointed opposition
Maki-Zay and a united opposition failed to wrest power from Hungary’s strong man.
Neither the war in Ukraine, Orban’s close ties to Putin, nor the opposition’s tactics of voting as a united group held.
Orban has been in power since 2010. This will be his fourth term.
Close ties with Putin did not weaken Orban
Orban has been one of Russia’s hottest supporters in the EU and has rejected President Volodymyr Zelensky’s desire for arms support and sanctions against Russia’s energy sector. He also refuses other countries to transport weapons to Ukraine via Hungary.
Orban was warmly received in the Kremlin no later than three weeks before the war and has been called Putin’s poodle in Europe.