The Economist April 9th 2022 Europe 31
Hungary’selection
Unstoppable strongman
A
s electiondaydawnedonApril3rd,
the coalition of parties trying to unseat
Viktor Orban, Hungary’s reactionary prime
minister, hoped that the polls showing
them trailing by six percentage points were
wrong. It turned out they were, but in the
other direction. Mr Orban’s governing Fi
desz party won 53% of the vote, while the
opposition United for Hungary alliance
took just 35%. Fidesz increased its margin
in parliament and retained the twothirds
supermajority needed to alter the constitu
tion. The opposition’s candidate, Peter
MarkiZay, was plucked from obscurity a
few months ago, and will most likely re
turn to it. Mr Orban, the European Union’s
longestserving leader, won a fourth con
secutive term and looks stronger than ever.
The prime minister claimed the win as
a vindication of his ideology of illiberal na
tionalism. Since taking office in 2010 he
has changed the constitution to benefit his
party, nobbled the courts and seized con
trol over most of the media. The euhas
chided his government for violating the
rule of law, misusing its funds and foster
ing corruption. Mr Orban casts himself as
an underdog defending his people against
eu bureaucrats, the international left and
George Soros, a Hungarianborn Jewish
philanthropist whom he accuses of plot
ting to flood Hungary with Muslim immi
grants. “We have such a victory it can be
seen from the moon, but it's sure that it can
be seen from Brussels,” Mr Orban crowed
after the results were in.
Also on his list of enemies is Volodymyr
Zelensky, Ukraine’s president. Mr Orban
has long had friendly relations with Vladi
mir Putin, and claimed to be getting a dis
count on Russian gas. He has been the
most reluctant member of the natoand eu
coalition in the war in Ukraine, fiercely ar
guing against sanctions on Russian energy
exports. In recent weeks Mr Zelensky has
demanded that Mr Orban decide which
side he is on. Mr Orban retorted that the
opposition would drag Hungary into the
war; they denied this, but many voters be
lieved it. Government figures released
after the election showed Hungary is actu
ally paying Russia market rates for its gas.
The opposition’s defeat leaves in ruins
its effort to build a coalition to stop the hol
lowingout of Hungarian democracy. Be
cause most mps in Hungary are elected
from singlemember districts, smaller par
ties struggle to win seats. After years of de
feats,in 2020 sixparties,rangingfromthe
nationalistrighttothemetropolitanleft,
joined forcesintheUnitedfor Hungary
umbrellagrouping.Theyranprimariesto
selectcandidatesforparliament andfor
prime minister. Party leaders set aside
theirownambitionstobackMrMarkiZay,
aconservative mayor who unexpectedly
wontheprimeministerialprimary.
Nowthatcoalitionlooksdead.Ferenc
Gyurcsany,a formerprimeministerwho
leads the centrist Democratic Coalition
party,seemedtoquestionwhetherholding
a primaryhadbeena goodidea.PeterJa
kab,theleaderofthehardrightJobbikpar
ty,reproachedMrMarkiZayforlackinga
clearfocus.Joiningthecentristcoalition
was devastating for Jobbik, which lost
mostofitsvoterstoFideszortoOurHome
land,a newnationalistparty.
Areportfromtheodihr, aEuropean
electionwatchdog,saidtheelectionlacked
a levelplayingfield.Themainproblemwas
nottampering,thoughtherewassomeof
that.Therewerereportsacrossthecountry
of“chainvoting”,inwhichvoterssmuggle
theirballotsoutofpollingstationssothat
theycanbefilledinbypartyorganisersand
thengiventoothervoterstosubmit,inex
changeforpayment.Butthemoreimpor
tantissuesweremediabiasandgovern
mentsupportforFidesz.MrOrbanuses
Hungary’s state media as a propaganda
megaphone,andmostprivateoutletsare
controlledbyoligarchsfriendlytoFidesz.
Theoppositionreceivedlittleairtime,and
whatitgotwasoverwhelminglynegative.
Itcouldspreaditsmessageonlyviaa few
independent newswebsiteswhich most
votersoutsideBudapestrarelyread.
UnderMrOrban,thebillionsofeurosin
aidwhichtheeusendstoHungaryeach
yearhaveflowedlargelytosupportersof
Fidesz.Hungaryhastheworstrecord of
fraudulentuseofeufundsofanycountry
intheunion,accordingtoolaf, theeu’s
fraudinvestigation agency. Mr Orban’s
friendsandrelativeshavegrownrich.The
euhasblockedHungaryfromaccessingits
covidrecoveryfund,andonApril5thit
triggereda procedurethatcouldcutoffthe
restoftheaidit sendstoHungaryuntilthe
countrystopsviolatingtheruleoflaw.
MrOrban’swinreinforceshisincreas
ingly autocratic government. His next
movemaybetocompletethetakeoverof
thejudiciary,accordingtoananalysisby
Political Capital, an independent think
tankinBudapest.Despitetheunfairelec
toralsystem,membersoftheopposition
tookmostoftheblameuponthemselves.A
SocialistmepapologisedonFacebookfor
failingtounderstandmostofthecountry.
Manyoppositionmemberswereata loss
howtoproceed.Askedhowheexpectedto
takeupthefightinfouryears,anorganiser
ofa liberalngohadnoanswer:“I’mhoping
toleavethecountry.”n
Viktor Orban wins again. But his countryisincreasinglyisolated
So much for unity
Hungary, parliamentary election
Source:NationalElectionOffice
2018
2022
Seatswon
Fidesz United for Hungary Jobbik MSZP Democratic Coalition Other UfH Our Homeland Others
135
133 26 20 9 8 3
56 7 1
2018
2022
0 25 50 75 100
Share of the vote, %
No match for the machine