Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hungary’s Viktor Orban wins re-election, gets super majority

- BY PABLO GORONDI

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban easily won a third consecutiv­e term Sunday and his Fidesz party was poised to regain its super majority in parliament, according to preliminar­y results from the country’s election.

With 84.7 percent of the votes counted, Fidesz and its small ally, the Christian Democrat party, had secured 133 of the 199 seats in the legislatur­e, the minimum needed for a two-thirds majority. The right-wing nationalis­t Jobbik party placed second with 26 seats, while a Socialist-led, left-wing coalition ran third with 20.

Only two other parties, former Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany’s Democratic Coalition and the green Politics Can Be Different party were expected to surpass the 5 percent threshold needed to form a parliament­ary faction.

Orban won his fourth term overall on a platform that openly demonizes migrants to Europe.

Opposition parties feared that another supermajor­ity would allow the autocratic leader to more easily push through constituti­onal changes, continue his crackdown on civic groups he claims work against Hungarian interests and further strengthen his grasp on the highly centralize­d state power structure.

Orban has campaigned heavily on his unyielding anti-migration policies. He claims the opposition is collaborat­ing with the United Nations, the European Union and wealthy philanthro­pist George Soros to turn Hungary into an “immigrant country,” threatenin­g its security and Christian identity.

“Hungarian democracy is strong,” Gergely Gulyas, the parliament faction leader for Fidesz, said. “Alongside high voter turnout, the country will have a strong, legitimate parliament.”

Government influence on the media was palpable in Sunday’s broadcast by state television M1 news channel, where reports highlighti­ng the negative effects of migration dominated the programmin­g.

On Origo.hu, a formerly independen­t website now owned by government allies, stories promoted Orban while also focusing on migration, The headlines included “Migrant gangs fought in England,” “They can’t stand it anymore in Sweden: They’ve had enough of migrants,” and “A migrant in underpants beat a German retiree half to death.”

The opposition denies Orban’s migration claims.

Uncertaint­ies about Orban’s expected margin of victory are due in part to Hungary’s complex electoral system, in which voters cast ballots for both an individual candidate in their region and another for a party list.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States