Vance ‘sad Orbán lost’ but says US will work with new Magyar government in Hungary – Europe live | World news

Morning opening: JD Vance ‘sad that Orbán lost,’ but will work with new Magyar government

Jakub Krupa

Hungarian election winner Péter Magyar has been invited to meet with the Hungarian president, Tamás Sulyok, on Wednesday to discuss the government-formation process following the stunning win over Viktor Orbán in Sunday’s election.

The meeting could be a bit awkward, given Magyar’s repeated calls for Sulyok, an Orbán loyalist, to resign from the office.

“He was appointed to sign everything; every document that he is presented with – whether it’s the menu or the constitution or the laws – so we don’t need people like that. To me, he is not the president,” he said yesterday.

Erm, nice weather, Mr President, huh?

Speaking of presidents, we finally heard from the US vice-president JD Vance overnight as he defended his decision to travel to Budapest last week to interfere with the Hungarian election support Orbán in the final days of the campaign.

US vice-president JD Vance (R) and then Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán shake hands on stage during a campaign event at MTK Sportpark in Budapest, Hungary. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/AFP/Getty Images

Appearing on Fox News, he said he was “said that [Orbán] lost,” but insisted the intervention “was not about Russia, and fundamentally, it was not about Europe,” merely a sign of thanks from the US administration for defending its interests against the EU bureaucracy.

“He’s one of the few European leaders we’ve seen who’s been willing to stand up to the bureaucracy in Brussels that has been very, very bad for the United States. So for example, when you see a European bureaucrat go after an American company, sometimes the only vote ‘no,’ the only vote to protect that American interest, has been Viktor Orbán.”

Vance added that the White House “certainly knew there was a very good chance that Viktor would lose that election,” but he wanted to “stand behind a person who had stood by us for a very long time.”

He also insisted that Orbán “is a great guy who’s done a very good job,” before adding:

“I think that his legacy in Hungary is transformational, 16 years, fundamentally changing that country.”

Well, hard to disagree with that.

But in a sign that will be reassuring to the incoming Magyar administration, however, he declared that “we will work very well, I am sure, with the new prime minister of Hungary.”

I will bring you more reactions and news from across Europe during the day.

It’s Tuesday, 14 April 2026, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Read More:  Air pollution making people in UK get long-term illnesses earlier, study finds | Air pollution

Good morning.

Share

Key events

New Hungarian government can ‘do a lot’ to restore rule of law, leading MEP says

Jennifer Rankin

in Brussels

The European parliament’s lead MEP on Hungary has expressed hope that Péter Magyar’s incoming government can “do a lot” to restore the rule of law thanks to its sweeping parliamentary majority.

European Parliament’s Rapporteur for the situation in Hungary MEP Tineke Strik speaks during a press conference on the situation in Hungary at the European Parliament in Brussels, Belgium. Photograph: Olivier Hoslet/EPA

Tineke Strik, a Dutch Green MEP, who is the European parliament’s lead coordinator on Hungary and the rule of law, said “that even a deeply cemented electoral autocracy as [Viktor] Orbán has created can be overturned so overwhelmingly” was “bad news for autocrats” in general.

The incoming Hungarian government, she said, had to deal with EU institutions over two sets of rule-of-law issues:

The Dutch MEP is responsible for overseeing the article 7 process, long becalmed because EU member states could not find a majority to sanction Hungary.

Speaking to journalists, on her return from Budapest, she said:

Magyar has promised to restore the rule of law, to respect the primacy of EU law and to combat corruption. And these are vital promises. And the big mandate that the voters have given to him also enable him to fulfil his promises. But it’s a complex operation which requires time and close cooperation with the EU.

In the light of the two-thirds majority we are hopeful that they are able to do a lot on the restoration [of the rule of law].

Unlike Poland where a nationalist president stymied a new reformist government’s attempts to reform the courts, Hungary should face fewer obstacles, she said.

She also suggested EU authorities needed to show flexibility on deadlines – Hungary risks losing €10.4bn in long-frozen Covid recovery funds, unless there is an agreement by the end of August 2026.

On 16 June, the Hungarian government is due to face a long-scheduled hearing under the long-running article 7 procedure, to discuss what steps it is taking to address concerns about captured courts and systemic corruption. Previous governments have used these occasions to mount aggressive denials.

In contrast, Strik said the 16 June hearing would be the “perfect occasion for a discussion in the [EU] Council where Magyar can present complete proposals with complete timelines”.

Read More:  Can Iran negotiations lead to peace? | US-Israel war on Iran

Magyar would be represented by his EU affairs minister at the 16 June hearing, which falls a few days before what is likely to be his first EU summit on 18-19 June.

Share
Facebook Comments Box