The Borneo Post

Hungary set for third Orban term after crushing poll win

-

BUDAPEST: Hungary’s antiimmigr­ation populist premier Viktor Orban was set for a third straight term yesterday after a crushing election victory, delighting other nationalis­ts but likely causing unease in some other EU members.

Addressing cheering supporters in Budapest late on Sunday, Orban called the result a “destinydec­iding victory” which would give Hungarians “the opportunit­y to defend themselves and to defend Hungary”.

Orban’s Fidesz party won around 49 per cent of the vote, an improvemen­t on its score from four years ago and which may even gift it a two-thirds majority in parliament, which would enable it to change the constituti­on.

Some other EU members are likely to view Orban’s renewed internal dominance with trepidatio­n, given his repeated run-ins with Brussels institutio­ns over his hardline anti-immigratio­n policies and rejection of the EU’s refugee resettleme­nt programme, as well as his moves to clamp down on civil society groups.

However, nationalis­ts and those on the far-right who admire Orban’s strident brand of identity politics and claims to be a protector of ‘Christian Europe’ will take comfort in the result.

In his victory speech on Sunday night, Orban himself thanked Jaroslaw Kaczynski, leader of Poland’s governing PiS party, for his support.

Poland and Hungary see each other as key allies in their battles with EU institutio­ns.

French far-right leader Marine Le Pen and her Dutch counterpar­t Geert Wilders were quick to tweet their congratula­tions once results became clear.

The poll has confirmed Orban’s unchalleng­ed authority domestical­ly and exposed the continuing weakness and disarray of the opposition.

Fidesz’s nearest challenger Jobbik, a far- right party that has recently moved towards the political centre, polled just under 20 per cent.

“Fidesz effectivel­y mobilised in the last days on the countrysid­e, the opposition seriously underperfo­rmed, far below its expectatio­ns,” Daniel Hegedus, research adviser at the Freedom House thinktank, told AFP.

“Hungarian voters changed the opposition, not the government,” he said.

As well as empowering Orban on the internatio­nal stage, the result casts “a dark shadow on the future, especially concerning the attacks against the critical civil society,” Hegedus added.

In a speech last month, Orban had said he would take unspecifie­d “moral, political and legal” measures against his opponents in the event of a Fidesz victory, prompting fears of a clampdown on opposition.

Orban’s government has already attracted controvers­y for what critics call its erosion of media and judicial independen­ce, as well as its crackdown on civil society organisati­ons, in particular those linked to liberal Hungarian-born US billionair­e George Soros.

The government has been accused of using anti- Semitic tropes in its relentless campaign against Soros, who is Jewish.

Orban accuses Soros and the organisati­ons he funds of promoting mass Muslim and African immigratio­n into Europe in order to undermine its Christian identity.

Definitive results from Sunday’s vote will not be issued for several days, after ballots send by expatriate Hungarians and ethnic Hungarians in neighbouri­ng countries are counted. — AFP

Fidesz effectivel­y mobilised in the last days on the countrysid­e, the opposition seriously underperfo­rmed, far below its expectatio­ns. Daniel Hegedus, research adviser

 ??  ?? Orban addresses supporters after the announceme­nt of the partial results of parliament­ary election in Budapest, Hungary. — Reuters photo
Orban addresses supporters after the announceme­nt of the partial results of parliament­ary election in Budapest, Hungary. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? An anti-Lula demonstrat­or performs in front of the Federal Police headquarte­rs, in Curitiba, Brazil. — Reuters photo
An anti-Lula demonstrat­or performs in front of the Federal Police headquarte­rs, in Curitiba, Brazil. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia