Magyar says his government will work for a ‘free, European’ Hungary in break with Orbán era – Europe live | World news

Magyar says his government will work for ‘free, European’ Hungary

Despite late night celebrations, it does not look like Peter Magyar has had a chance to lie in a bit longer today.

Earlier this morning, he thanked the voters once again on his Facebook, saying:

“Thanks to every Hungarian at home and across the world!

It is a huge honour that you have empowered us with the most votes ever to form a government and to work for a free, European, well-functioning and compassionate Hungary over the next four years. The Tisza government will be the government of every Hungarian person.”

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Key events

‘No far-right leader can fill Orbán’s shoes’

Cas Mudde

Stanley Wade Shelton UGAF professor of international affairs at the University of Georgia, and author of The Far Right Today

Hungary’s election is a reminder that much of the public discourse wildly overstates the strength of authoritarianism and the weakness of democracy. Orbán’s acceptance of the result also again drives home how exceptional Donald Trump is in refusing to recognise his election defeat in 2020.

Hungary’s prime minister Viktor Orbán addresses supporters at the Balna centre in Budapest during a general election in Hungary. Photograph: Attila Kisbenedek/AFP/Getty Images

The result will be used for all kinds of fallacious claims, from this marking the end of the far right in Europe to the idea that Orbán lost because of his association with the toxicity of the Trump regime. But in fact, this was a specifically Hungarian event, to be explained by specifically Hungarian factors – such as 16 years of corruption and economic mismanagement – rather than international ones, including JD Vance’s visit to Budapest.

This result nevertheless has a strong symbolic value for European politics. Orbán replaced Marine Le Pen as the unofficial leader of the still heavily divided European far right during Europe’s 2015 so-called “refugee crisis”. He has also given the far right a permanent presence in the European Council from where he vetoed or obstructed many EU decisions, and in the European Commission (Hungary’s commissioners have shown more loyalty to Orbán than to the EU).

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Orbán is gone, for now. And while there are many other far-right politicians (Giorgia Meloni for example) and European disrupters (such as Slovak premier Robert Fico), none have the intent, power or resources to step into the void that Orbán’s defeat creates.

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