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Hungary’s feuding parties gather for key show of force ahead of election

By Thomson Reuters Mar 15, 2026 | 6:12 AM

By Krisztina Fenyo and Gergely Szakacs

BUDAPEST, March 15 (Reuters) – Hungary’s feuding political parties gathered for a key show of force on Sunday as an acrimonious campaign between right-wing Prime ​Minister Viktor Orban and centre-right challenger Peter Magyar entered a ‌pivotal stage ahead of an April 12 election.

In power since 2010, Orban faces what could be his toughest bid for re-election after three years of stagnation, a surge in the cost of living and the rise of a pro-European ‌Union ​rival seen by many as a viable ⁠alternative.

Orban’s Fidesz party and ⁠Magyar’s Tisza were both due to stage large-scale marches in Budapest to mark Hungary’s March 15 national day and rally their supporters, with most surveys showing Tisza ahead by a wide margin.

Orban ​has cast the vote as a choice between war and peace, accusing his rivals of plotting to drag Hungary into the ⁠war raging in neighbouring Ukraine since Russia’s ⁠February 2022 invasion, accusations which the opposition has ​denied.

But Orban’s messages still resonated with supporters gathering in the streets of ​Budapest and planning to march to parliament to attend a ‌speech by the veteran nationalist leader.

“Hungarians, young or old should not be sent to the front lines, because this is a senseless war,” said Maria Erdelyi, who attended the rally. “This is only about ⁠money and nothing else.”

Orban has long been at loggerheads with the EU over Ukraine, among many other issues. Defying Brussels, he has maintained cordial ⁠ties with Moscow, refuses ‌to send weapons to Ukraine, and says Kyiv ⁠can never join the EU.

Jozsef Lados called Orban “Europe’s ​best ‌politician”, saying Hungary should stick with him instead ​of betting on ⁠Magyar, whom he described as an “adventurer”.

Magyar has dismissed Orban’s campaign as laughable “propaganda”, but Tisza has trodden cautiously on Ukraine, saying it opposes any fast-track EU accession for Kyiv and that it would put the issue to a binding referendum if it wins power.

(Reporting by Gergely SzakacsEditing ​by Gareth Jones)