Orban ramps up anti-Ukraine talk in pre-vote showdown with rival
Published in News & Features
Prime Minister Viktor Orban ratcheted up his anti-Ukraine rhetoric, casting next month’s Hungarian election as a choice between sticking with him or installing a puppet of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Orban, the European Union leader who is closest to Russia and also an ally of U.S. President Donald Trump, told a crowd outside the Hungarian Parliament in Budapest that only by reelecting him could they avoid their sons being sent off to die for Kyiv. Orban cast Ukraine as the latest enemy that he needed to defy.
“As a young man I said no to the Soviets,” he said, referencing a landmark 1989 speech in which he demanded Russian troops leave Hungary. “Now I’m saying no to the Ukrainians.”
Rival supporters are gathering in Budapest for a final big test of strength before next month’s election, which could bring an end to Orban’s 16-year rule. Independent polls place Peter Magyar’s Tisza party as much as 20 points ahead of Orban’s Fidesz, with voters voicing anger at economic stagnation, the poor state of public services and a series of corruption and child protection scandals.
The March 15 national holiday, commemorating the 1848 revolution in which Hungarians rose up against the Austrian Habsburgs, is traditionally a moment for dueling party rallies. But the proximity of the April 12 vote and international tensions give this year’s events even more charge.
The EU’s longest-serving premier accuses the war-ravaged country of cutting Hungary’s energy supplies in a bid to topple his government, while Kyiv has hit out at Orban for attempting to block aid.
“Kyiv and Brussels need to understand: our sons won’t die for Ukraine, but live for Hungary,” he told thousands of supporters gathered in the spring sunshine.
Also on display was the resource advantage of Orban’s party. Hundreds of coaches brandishing the logo of a pro-government organization lined a wide avenue in the capital, evidence that many supporters were bused in for the event. State television, meanwhile, carried Orban’s speech live and then replayed it during Tisza’s rally.
Rival rally
As Orban concluded his remarks, Magyar’s supporters were massing ahead of their parade up the city’s grandest boulevard to Heroes Square.
“All the Hungarians wanted in 1848 was freedom,” Magyar said on social media, framing Orban as a latter-day successor to the Habsburg emperor. “And that’s all they want today, too.”
A former Fidesz party insider with a younger, more urban support base, Magyar is on home turf in the capital. The relative crowd sizes on a sunny day in early spring are likely to be crucial in shaping the final weeks of the campaign.
There are signs that Orban, a tenacious campaigner who has dominated Hungarian politics since the end of Communism in 1989, is narrowing the gap in opinion polls with his warnings — denied by Tisza — that the opposition would ensnare Hungary in the Ukraine war.
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