The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hungary sees huge turnouts for election

Anti-migrant leader seeking re-election; polls extend closing.

- By Pablo Gorondi

BUDAPEST, HUNGARY — Many polling places around Hungary remained open after their expected closing time to accommodat­e people waiting in long lines to vote Sunday after the country’s parliament­ary election received a larger-than-expected turnout.

Ballots were being tallied in the election stations that closed on time, but officials said no results would be announced until after everyone in line by the scheduled 7 p.m. deadline had been able to vote and all polling sites were shut.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban is seeking a fourth term on a platform that openly demonizes migrants to Europe.

Prediction­s on whether Orban’s message resonated with voters were complicate­d by the exceptiona­lly high turnout, last-minute deals between some left-wing opposition parties and a complex electoral system that allows citizens to cast two votes.

Hungary’s National Election Office reported that over 5.3 million voters of the 8.3 million eligible voters had cast ballots by 6:30 p.m., for a turnout of 68.1 percent. Some officials said the final participat­ion figure could be the highest since Hungary returned to democracy in 1990.

Preliminar­y results were expected after 11 p.m. Sunday night. In all, 199 seats in parliament were up for grabs.

Opposition parties were keen to make sure Orban’s bloc does not obtain a super-majority that would allow the autocratic leader to more easily push through constituti­onal changes, continue his crackdown on civic groups that 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 that 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.

Voters, though, said they were more concerned with poverty, growing government corruption and the country’s underfunde­d health care system.

Long lines of voters were reported at the Hungarian embassies in London and Paris.

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

Analysts, however, were more cautious about the significan­ce of the turnout.

“Voter turnout is at record high,” tweeted Tamas Boros, co-director of the Policy Solutions think tank. “This means either an overwhelmi­ng support for Orban or the end of Fidesz as (the) omnipotent political party in Hungary,” he said in the tweet.

“The Hungarian political landscape will dramatical­ly change today.”

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.

 ?? LASZLO BALOGH PHOTOS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, seeking re-election, leaves from the polling station in Budapest, Hungary, Sunday.
LASZLO BALOGH PHOTOS / GETTY IMAGES Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, seeking re-election, leaves from the polling station in Budapest, Hungary, Sunday.
 ??  ?? Hungarians cast their ballots after waiting in long lines Sunday in Budapest. In all, 199 parliament­ary seats were at stake, in addition to the prime minister’s seat.
Hungarians cast their ballots after waiting in long lines Sunday in Budapest. In all, 199 parliament­ary seats were at stake, in addition to the prime minister’s seat.

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