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Who is Péter Magyar, the man who ended Orbán’s reign?

Peter Magyar, leader of the pro-European conservative TISZA party, who is the new Prime Minister of Hungary.

The victory of the 45-year-old lawyer is expected to end Hungary’s automatic veto of anti-Israel initiatives in the European Union.

The long election campaign of Péter Magyar and his Tisza party ended in an historic victory that led to the ousting of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who ruled the country for the past 16 years.

Magyar, a 45-year-old lawyer who emerged from the inner circle of power in Orbán’s Fidesz party, went in less than two years from being an almost anonymous figure to the leader the Hungarian opposition had been waiting for.

He is also expected to reshape the balance of power within Europe, which until now had mainly seen the rise of right-wing parties skeptical of the European Union.

Magyar grew up in Budapest in a family of lawyers, and as a child, he hung a photograph on his bedroom wall of a young Viktor Orbán, then one of the leading figures in the democratic struggle against communism. He was nine when the regime collapsed. “There was a surge of energy around the change of regime that swept me up as a child,” he said in an interview with the Hungarian podcast Fokuszcsoport.

In 2006, he married Judit Varga, who would later become justice minister in Orbán’s government. He moved with her to Brussels, where she worked as a political adviser in E.U. institutions, and joined Hungary’s permanent mission to those institutions. The couple has three sons.

In February 2024, a scandal led to the end of Varga’s political career and to Magyar’s breakthrough. President Katalin Novák granted clemency to a man convicted of covering up pedophilia at a children’s home, and Varga, who had signed the pardon document as justice minister, was forced to resign.

Magyar, who until then had been a quiet behind-the-scenes figure, launched an unprecedented public campaign against corruption at the top of Fidesz. In an interview on the YouTube channel Partizán that gained wide attention, he laid out his claims against the party and released embarrassing recordings of senior officials.

A few months later, Magyar joined the Tisza party, which until then had been marginal, and led it to a surprise result in the June 2024 European Parliament election. The party won about 29% of the vote and secured six of Hungary’s 21 seats.

‘Fidesz without corruption’

Magyar’s campaign sought to present itself as “Fidesz without corruption”—a right-wing politician who supports tough immigration policies and Hungarian nationalism, but focuses on the concrete problems facing ordinary Hungarians, including a faltering economy, the collapse of the healthcare and education systems, and a brain drain from the country.

Without access to the traditional media controlled by Fidesz, Magyar had to build his campaign through social media and grassroots organizing. He walked across Hungary with supporters, set up a network of local party branches called “Tisza Islands” and launched a newspaper distributed by volunteers to reach rural voters, Orbán’s traditional strongholds.

Orbán portrayed Magyar as an envoy of the Brussels-based E.U. establishment and as a Ukrainian agent, to the point that at times it seemed his real rival was Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy rather than Magyar. Orbán and his allies repeatedly claimed that Magyar would drag Hungary into the war in Ukraine, an issue that worries Hungarians in part because of the country’s energy dependence on Russia.

In the final stretch of the campaign, pro-government media circulated allegations that Magyar used drugs, prompting him to travel to Vienna for tests at an independent laboratory to disprove them.

Magyar’s rise changed the face of the opposition. Left-wing and center-left parties withdrew from the race one after another so as not to split the anti-Orbán vote and to give Magyar a chance. The election effectively became a contest between right and right.

The scale of the victory is critical—Magyar’s two-thirds majority in parliament will now allow him to amend the constitution shaped by Orbán over 16 years in power, while a narrow majority would have left his hands tied against state institutions Orbán filled with his loyalists.

Magyar’s victory is expected to shift the balance of power in the E.U.

Russia will lose one of its main assets on the continent. For years, Orbán served as an almost automatic blocker of sanctions on Moscow and aid to Ukraine, and with Magyar’s victory, that automatic veto is expected to disappear. Magyar has promised pragmatic relations with Moscow, while at the same time reducing Hungary’s energy dependence on Russia and aligning with E.U. positions.

The election is also especially critical for Israel. Under Orbán, Hungary was Israel’s closest friend in the E.U. and repeatedly blocked anti-Israel initiatives in Brussels.

Magyar, by contrast, maintained deliberate ambiguity throughout the campaign on anything related to Israel, and in Jerusalem, the assumption is that even if he is not hostile, he will not clash with the E.U. on Israel’s behalf.

Originally published by Israel Hayom.

 

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