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THE STAKES: HUNGARY AFTER ORBÁN: THE WORK OF DEMOCRACY BEGINS

  • Apr 28
  • 1 min read

 Hungarian voters delivered a decisive electoral upset to strongman Viktor Orbán, who spent 16 years consolidating power, capturing institutions, and portraying himself as the global template for illiberal democracy. Opposition leader Péter Magyar won a landslide victory, with turnout exceeding 77 percent. The new government now holds a two-thirds parliamentary supermajority.


In this episode of The Stakes, CFK Global Fellows Gábor Scheiring and Kristóf Szombati, both veterans of Hungarian opposition politics, examine what happened and what the results do and don’t resolve. They trace how Magyar built a movement that broke through a media environment controlled by Orbán allies, mobilized rural communities that previous opposition campaigns ignored, and attracted defectors from inside the regime’s own security apparatus.



 


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GÁBOR SCHEIRING

Tracing the path of the polycrisis of liberal globalism, while mapping the responses
that foster economic and political revival.

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