By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Hungary Today
A subject we covered
before, together with Italy's Meloni, the surprising issue is that not much has changed since then.
Hungarians have a
popular saying: "Visszanyal a fagyi". Translation: "The ice-cream licks
back." In other words, watch out, because what you enjoy devouring might
enjoy devouring you.
Hungarian
Prime Minister Viktor Orban has assiduously attacked a liberal world view
for at least two decades, transforming the country into what he has variously
called an "illiberal democracy" and nation of "Christian
liberty".
Four years ago,
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s authority was at its peak. After 12
years in which he systematically dismantled Hungary’s democracy and replaced it
with an autocratic system concentrating political power and illicit wealth in
the hands of family members and loyalists, Orban’s party, Fidesz, secured a fourth consecutive
supermajority in the 2022 elections. Shortly after, he institutionalized rule
by decree because of the war in neighboring Ukraine - the third such
declaration issued by Orban under the cover of a state of emergency. The
opposition, meanwhile, was fragmented. Without credible leaders, unhappy voters
drifted into apathy as Orban built what we have described in our research as a
“mafia state” - a characterization now adopted by the opposition and even
referenced by Orban himself in a campaign ad depicting him as the crime boss
in The Godfather.
Today, the picture
has changed considerably. Despite retaining overwhelming control over the
state, the media, and vast sectors of the economy, the regime has been unable
to stop the rise of a new political force. The Tisza Party, led by the former
regime insider Peter Magyar, has run ahead of Fidesz in independent polls since
late 2024, with recent surveys showing a 23-point advantage among likely voters.
As the April 12 elections approach, Magyar has rekindled the hope that after 16
years, a system long seen as unassailable may finally meet its end.
Magyar’s campaign - the
most serious challenge to Orban since his return
to power, and did not come out of nowhere. It was made possible by the
gradual erosion of the regime’s pillars of support and the complacency of a
leader increasingly insulated from meaningful political competition. Years of
centralized power, sustained financial inflows from the EU, and a weak,
corrupted opposition created a false sense of stability within the regime. Yet
beneath the surface, dissatisfaction had been building, waiting to be activated
by a charismatic leader. By speaking to both disillusioned opposition voters
and segments of Fidesz’s own base, Magyar has emerged as precisely that figure.
Hungary’s future will
turn on the outcome of Sunday’s elections. If Magyar wins and Orban allows the
results to stand, the new government can set Hungary on a path back toward
democracy. But the regime might be prepared to go to great lengths to secure victory,
unwilling to relinquish a system that has enabled its mafia-like functioning
and its members’ impunity. And if Orban remains in power, he will do what it
takes to deny his opponents another chance like this one - and that will mean
pushing Hungary further toward the consolidation of autocracy.

Hungarian Godfather
After Fidesz won a
supermajority in 2010, Orban painstakingly created a mafia state,
combining absolute power and systemic corruption organized from the top. The
following year, he rewrote the constitution and filled key institutions such as
the Constitutional Court and the Prosecution Service with loyalists,
establishing unchecked control over the state. He also built a vast network of
dependence, rewarding compliant officials with plum positions, enriching loyal
oligarchs through state contracts, and, at the lowest level, granting local
leaders and public workers livelihoods tied to the regime. He denied these
opportunities to Fidesz’s opponents and threatened to punish disloyalty from
insiders by stripping them of their favored status. Like a mafia boss who
decides the fate of the members of his immediate and adopted family, Orban
stands at the top of his own adopted political family to which nearly every
sector of Hungarian society must pay tribute.
Orban’s mafia state
managed to gather considerable but not overwhelming popular
support, engineering electoral victories by extending its patron-client
network, constructing a state-funded propaganda machine, and reshaping
electoral laws in Fidesz’s favor. The stability of this regime has depended on
three pillars: economic growth from external financial support, suppression and
co-optation of the opposition, and an increasingly widespread belief that Orban
could not be defeated.
Unlike authoritarian
systems in the Middle East or post-Soviet Europe and Central Asia that sustain
themselves by tapping natural resource wealth, the Orban regime was largely
financed by the EU. Annual EU transfers constituted around three percent of Hungary’s
GDP, exceeding the level of aid the United States provided to European
countries through the Marshall Plan after World War II. The regime funneled aid
through public procurements from Brussels to Orban’s political network, with
connected companies winning over $30 billion in contracts between 2010 and
2025, according to the Financial Times. It was through
procurements that Orban’s childhood friend, Lorinc Meszaros, went from modest
entrepreneur to Hungary’s richest man, widely believed to be acting as Orban’s
frontman, holding assets on the prime minister’s behalf. EU funds, combined with
a global economic upswing lasting from 2013 until the COVID-19
pandemic in 2020, enabled the regime to construct and sustain its network of
dependencies.
The blatant
corruption and breakdown of public services that followed gave critics ample
evidence to make their case against Fidesz. But the regime employed a wide
variety of tools to silence or co-opt dissent, absorbing the opposition into
the autocratic system by infiltrating and domesticating parties, placing fines
on others in an attempt to liquidate them, and creating fake
parties to divide opposition votes in elections. Protests took place, but most
died out as quickly as they broke out. With no channels for public
dissatisfaction to be converted into a political force, the system effectively
insulated itself from any political costs of its own scandals and failures.
This suppression
produced the system’s psychological pillar: the myth of inevitability. Every
opposition defeat reinforced the sense among a growing number of Hungarians
that resistance had become futile. Hungarians increasingly made their peace
with the regime, seeking not to challenge but rather to adapt to it. Orban
presented himself as the guarantor of peace against a warmongering opposition
ahead of elections in 2022, but the effectiveness of his messaging also
depended on the perception of his permanence. As long as the system seemed
unassailable, many sought to rationalize Fidesz’s politics or accept its
propagandistic claims. In 2022, polls showed that nearly a third of opposition
voters believed the government’s unfounded claim that the opposition would lead
Hungary into war; in an anti-LGBT referendum held concurrently with that year’s
parliamentary elections, 300,000 more voters supported the government’s
position than voted for Fidesz.

The Challenger
The system’s apparent
stability seems to have misled Orban. After the 2022 elections, his attention
increasingly shifted to global politics. Orban helped establish the right-wing
Patriots for Europe faction within the EU and sought to soften Western sanctions
on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. This international turn, however, came
at a cost. Orban was slow to recognize that his regime’s domestic support was
beginning to crumble.
The economic
foundation began to shake in December 2022, when the EU froze more than half of
Hungary’s allocated funds over alleged violations of the rule of law. At the
same time, the slow global recovery from the pandemic and the government’s
anticompetitive policies pushed the economy into stagnation, and inflation
surged into double digits. This strained the regime’s network of dependencies:
as the budget tightened, low-level members lost access to resources as Orban
channeled funds upward. In 2025, Meszaros’s fortune grew by approximately $1.5
billion; Hungary’s GDP increased by less than half that amount.
Economic hardship
fueled widespread social discontent. The revelation in early 2024 that an
individual with ties to the government had received a presidential pardon in a
high-profile child abuse case led to mass protests. The demonstrations,
however, were not led by the opposition. A demonstration in Budapest organized
by social media influencers, for example, drew around 150,000
people, whereas the opposition’s own rally mobilized only about 1,500.
Opposition to the regime mounted, but a gap remained between popular demand for
change and the political means to supply it.
Into this gap stepped
Peter Magyar. A former head of Hungary’s state-owned Student Loan Center and a
visible presence at Orban’s events, Magyar broke with the regime after the
pardoning scandal, accusing Orban of unjustly shifting the blame for the pardon
onto President Katalin Novak and Justice Minister Judit Varga, Magyar’s
ex-wife. Magyar’s prior affiliation with Orban enhanced his credibility. In the
eyes of many Hungarians, his break with Fidesz appeared as both a symptom and a
catalyst of the regime’s unraveling.
Magyar further
enhanced his credibility by refusing to strike deals with the neutralized and
discredited opposition. By rejecting cooperation with old, corrupt parties, he
succeeded in uniting anti-Orban voters behind a project of regime change.
Magyar created a movement that turned the previously inactive Tisza into the
strongest opposition party in the June 2024 European Parliament elections. By
October 2024, it had overtaken Fidesz in the polls.
Magyar has powered
Tisza’s rise in part by crafting a new political language. His campaign has
recast Hungarian nationalism, long monopolized by Fidesz, on more inclusive
terms. Whereas Orban equates his supporters with the country and excludes his
critics from it, Magyar recognizes Fidesz voters as part of a shared political
community. Tisza’s program, which speaks pragmatically about a “functioning
Hungary,” avoids divisive ideological rhetoric. Magyar’s criticism of the
regime is targeted narrowly at its main beneficiaries, to whom Magyar promises
a “road to prison.” He has described the political system as a mafia state led
by the “Orban clan” and has presented the challenge of rebuilding Hungary as
regime change. Unlike the state-sanctioned opposition, which downplayed
corruption because it ranked relatively low among voters’ stated concerns,
Magyar has connected Hungarians’ everyday grievances - underfunded health care,
failing public services, deteriorating infrastructure - directly to systemic
corruption. The critique has cut across ideological and partisan divides,
resonating with voters across the political spectrum.
After years of
failure by the opposition to overcome the regime’s divide-and-conquer strategy,
Magyar’s reframing of Hungarian politics not as a contest between left and
right but as one between the nation and the criminal system that exploits it
has finally produced a coalition broad enough to challenge Orban. In a recent
poll, 43 percent of Tisza voters identified as liberal, 22 percent as
left-wing, and 11 percent as right-wing.
Magyar’s rise
shattered the myth of Orban’s inevitability. By June 2025, for the first time
in two decades, polls showed that a majority of Hungarian voters no longer
expected a Fidesz victory in the next election. By March 2026, 47 percent of
the population anticipated a Tisza win, compared with 35 percent who expected
Fidesz to retain power. Hungarians who had resigned themselves to the current
system have begun to embrace the prospect of change.

The Nation or the Clan?
Magyar’s
unprecedented challenge to Orban’s regime has yielded a campaign of
unprecedented intensity. In the span of a single week in March, The Washington
Post reported that Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto had
regularly briefed Russia on high-level EU negotiations and that the Russian
secret services had floated the possibility of false-flag operations to instill
fear ahead of the election, the opposition outlet 444.hu reported
that members of Orban’s network began evacuating assets to Dubai, and the
former police captain Bence Szabo went public with claims that the Hungarian
secret service had attempted to infiltrate Tisza to undermine it from the
inside. The revelations have further underscored that the regime places no
moral limits on the means it is willing to deploy to protect itself - including
by meddling with the election itself.
In theory, Orban
could make use of the many legal mechanisms he has created to insulate the
regime from democratic accountability. With election day just a few days out,
he could yet postpone the vote. If the elections take place and Orban loses, he
could annul the results by claiming foreign interference; his campaign is
already laying the groundwork for such an argument. If Magyar appears set to
take office, Orban could still rewrite constitutional rules to embed vetoes in
executive and legislative decision-making channels to constrain his ability to
act, while loyalists and oligarchs across the state and economy could obstruct
the new government.
For the regime, the
stakes are not merely losing power but potential prosecution. Leaders in
similar systems - former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, the Moldovan
power broker Vladimir Plahotniuc, former North Macedonian Prime Minister Nikola
Gruevski - ultimately fled their countries to avoid justice, Gruevski with
assistance from the Hungarian secret services. The prospect of legal
consequences could push Orban to consider any means necessary to win.
Yet the regime’s
delayed response to Magyar’s ascendancy narrows Orban’s room to maneuver. With
such a large and mobilized opposition, overtly autocratic steps can easily
backfire. Despite receiving preelection payoffs from the government, the
security forces would likely refuse to suppress large-scale protests should the
vote be postponed or annulled. Lacking a credible option for
deploying coercive force to suppress the vote, the regime is left to rely on
fiscal handouts and fearmongering propaganda, but these appear to be yielding
diminishing returns: whereas once a third of opposition voters believed the
opposition would lead Hungary into war, now only about one percent of
opposition voters do.
Regime Change, at Home and Abroad
The results of the
elections will reverberate far beyond Hungary. Under Orban, the country has
become Russia’s most valuable subversive asset within NATO and the EU, using
its veto power to obstruct the organizations’ foreign policy and security
decisions. If victorious, Orban could deepen Budapest’s links with Moscow,
putting Hungary on the path toward “Belarusization” -
turning it into a Russian client state with little realistic prospect of a
pro-Western government - on the EU’s periphery or outside it altogether.
Orban’s success could also galvanize other right-wing populists and aspiring
criminal autocrats who have long looked to Orban as a model, from Georgia and
Slovakia to the United States.
At home, a Magyar
victory would open the possibility of dismantling the state-run criminal
network and restoring the rule of law. But if Orban wins, he will want to
prevent another close call. His criminal system will have no other choice but
to entrench its power once and for all, securing impunity for the regime’s
beneficiaries by further severing the country’s ties to the West and
intensifying repression through a purge of those Orban deems “foreign agents” -
including independent media, investigative journalists, and nongovernmental
organizations. The vote on April 12 is Hungary’s best chance in 16 years to
choose democracy over autocracy. It may not come again.
For updates click hompage here