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Hungarys election could end Orbns journey from liberal firebrand to far-right leader
FILE -Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban speaks during a panel discussion organised by publisher houses about 'Storm over Europe - the Ukraine war, the energy crisis and geopolitical challenges' in Berlin, Germany, Oct. 11, 2022. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber), File)2026-04-10T11:34:43Z BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbn, the European Unions longest-serving leader and one of its biggest antagonists, has taken a long road from his early days as a liberal, anti-Soviet firebrand to the Russia-friendly nationalist admired by the global far-right today.After dominating Hungarian politics for more than two decades, the 62-year-old could suffer a defeat during Sundays elections which could bring his 16-year reign to a spectacular end. Most polls have him at a double-digit deficit despite a recent visit from U.S. Vice President JD Vance meant to boost his chances. Facing the center-right Tisza party and its popular leader, Pter Magyar, Orbn has deployed a barrage of disinformation and AI-generated smear ads, and warned voters that bankruptcy and all-out war would come to Hungary if he loses.Orbn, a symbol of the countrys burgeoning democracy in the 1990s, has resorted to tactics that would have shocked his early supporters, and likely his younger self. From liberal to nationalistBeloved by many older and more rural Hungarians and reviled by detractors, Orbn has emerged as the countrys most consequential leader since its transition to democracy at the end of the Cold War.Born in 1963, Orbn grew up in a modest household in rural Felcst, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) outside Budapest. A gifted student and avid soccer fan, he studied law and later went to Oxford to study political science under a scholarship awarded by a foundation run by George Soros the Hungarian-born financier that Orbn would later frame as the countrys most sinister bogeyman. In 1988, Orbn co-founded Fidesz, originally a liberal, anti-communist youth party. The following year as a 26-year-old law student, he gave a fiery speech before tens of thousands, demanding Soviet troops leave Hungary a bold move during the waning days of the Communist era. Read More After first entering parliament in 1990 as head of the Fidesz caucus, he became one of Europes youngest-ever prime ministers when he won a national election in 1998 at the age of 35. But as Hungarys political dynamics changed and other liberal parties emerged, he began steering Fidesz to the right, transforming it into a vehicle for increasingly nationalist conservatism. Many observers view the election in 2002, when he lost to Hungarys Socialist party, as a turning point in Orbns approach to power. Speaking to Fidesz members afterward, he set the agenda for major changes he would introduce once back in office.Weve only got to win once, but weve got to win big, he said. The Orbn eraIt took eight years of leading the opposition in parliament, but that big win finally came. Orbn rode discontent over the fallout from the 2008 global financial crisis, as well as scandal and mismanagement by the Socialist government, to return as prime minister in 2010. Fidesz won a two-thirds majority in parliament.It marked a turning point. With its overwhelming mandate, Fidesz set to work reshaping Hungary by unilaterally writing a new constitution, re-rigging the electoral system and stacking the courts.Meanwhile, Orbn began siphoning public contracts, largely financed by the European Union, into companies owned by loyalists. Those loyalists in turn bought up hundreds of media outlets and forced others into closure. By the end of the decade, it was estimated that Fidesz and its allies controlled up to 80% of Hungarys private media market.Using the power and resources of the state, Orbn also has transformed public media into a mouthpiece for his party, and spent billions on state-funded communication billboards, ads and letters to households to boost his narratives. Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders has called him a press freedom predator.Despite the EU and international watchdogs sounding the alarm the European Parliament declared Hungary an electoral autocracy in 2022 Orbns supporters praise him as a defender of Christian values and national sovereignty in the face of globalization, mass migration and what he describes as an oppressive EU. Appearing to revel in disrupting EU decision making, Orbn built border fences and enacted harsh immigration and asylum policies, casting migrants and refugees as part of a globalist ploy to replace Europes white population.He told a party gathering in Romania in 2022 that we do not want to become peoples of mixed-race. A friend of Trump and PutinOrbns government has frequently clashed with Brussels over corruption, press freedom, judicial independence and anti-LGBTQ+ legislation. More recently, it has prevented EU efforts to support Ukraine and sanction Russia over its full-scale invasion.The bloc has frozen billions in funding to Hungary over rule-of-law concerns. In response, Orbn has campaigned heavily against the EU, comparing it to the Soviet Union, which had dominated Hungary for over four decades.Orbn also has cultivated close ties with like-minded leaders including U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Hes made common cause with euroskeptic, far-right parties, predicting a patriotic takeover of EU institutions.His pursuit of a foreign policy at odds with the Western consensus has drawn accusations that he is acting to benefit Moscow.As the Hungarian election approaches, media reports have suggested Russian secret services were meddling to tip Sundays vote in Orbns favor, something Russia denied. Other reports showed Orbns foreign minister frequently shared sensitive details on closed-door EU meetings with his Russian counterpart.Orbns election opponent, Magyar, has seized on the prime ministers drift toward Moscow, with supporters shouting at his rallies: Russians go home!Magyar, whose victory is still far from assured, calls Sundays election a referendum on whether Hungary continues deeper into autocracy or retakes its place among Europes democratic societies. JUSTIN SPIKE Spike is an Associated Press reporter based in Budapest, Hungary. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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