Péter Magyar’s Tisza Party won a landslide victory in Hungary’s Sunday parliamentary election, securing 138 of 199 seats with over 53% of the vote, granting a constitutional supermajority and ending Viktor Orbán’s 16-year rule.
Orbán conceded defeat less than three hours after polls closed, calling the result “painful but unambiguous,” and confirmed in a phone call to Magyar: “I congratulated the victorious party. We are going to serve the Hungarian nation and our homeland from opposition as well.” He later addressed supporters, saying, “The days ahead of us are for us to heal our wounds,” and pledged continued service from opposition.
Magyar declared victory saying: “My fellow Hungarians, we have done it! Together, we liberated Hungary and got rid of the Orbán regime.”
Speaking to tens of thousands along the Danube, Magyar said, “Tonight, truth prevailed over lies,” and credited voters with rewriting history by asking “what they could do for their homeland.” He called for peaceful celebration and announced plans to begin the “healing” of the country immediately, urging Orbán not to take any obstructive actions before leaving office. The prime minister-elect also demanded the resignation of Hungary’s President Tamás Sulyok, along with the heads of the supreme court, chief prosecutor, media authority, and competition office, citing the need to dismantle Orbán’s captured institutions and hold corrupt actors accountable.
Tisza’s supermajority enables reversal of Orbán-era laws, judicial reforms, and unlocking of frozen EU funds.
Record turnout reached nearly 80%, driven heavily by youth, with polls indicating 65% of voters under 30 opposed Orbán.
Orbán, a close ally of U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, faced international left-wing opposition for his conservative pro-family, anti-LGBTQ and anti-illegal immigration policies and his opposition to the European Union's globalist agenda and Russia-Ukraine policies.
Globalist leaders, including European Union's Ursula von der Leyen, Keir Starmer, and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, celebrated the result as a win for European democracy, while Volodymyr Zelenskyy expressed readiness to improve bilateral ties despite Magyar’s opposition to arming Ukraine. The center-right prime minister-elect ran to the ideological right of Orbán during the campaign