This article offers an account of the euphoria occasioned by the victory of Péter Magyar’s Tisza Party in the Hungarian election of 12 April 2026, which ended the 16-year rule of Viktor Orbán and Fidesz, as well as a detailed explanation of events. Three dimensions of Magyar’s victory are considered: the structural dimension, that is the country’s economic, legal and social-psychological degeneration under Orbán that eventually caused the system to collapse under its own weight; the miscalculated electoral campaign of Fidesz, which was characterised by fear mongering; and the charisma of the tireless Magyar, whose personal contact with voters extended to the country’s most remote corners and created the self-fulfilling prophecy that Orbán and Fidesz could be defeated and a functioning Hungary restored. The article ends with a discussion of the possibility that a break-up of Tisza might lead to a renewed multiparty system in Hungary.
Boldizsár Nagy (Mon,) studied this question.
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