Lex Orbán Passed in Hungarian Parliament

The constitution of Hungary was amended to prevent the five-time conservative prime minister from returning to power.

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Hungarian Prime Minister Péter Magyar speaks before the agenda in parliament ahead of the Lex Orbán vote on June 15, 2026.

Hungarian Prime Minister Péter Magyar speaks before the agenda in parliament ahead of the Lex Orbán vote on June 15, 2026.

ATTILA KISBENEDEk / AFP

The constitution of Hungary was amended to prevent the five-time conservative prime minister from returning to power.

The Hungarian parliament on Monday, June 15th, voted to amend the country’s constitution and limit the mandates of prime ministers to 8 years, with a retroactive effect.

The amendment, which critics describe as a typical example of ad personam legislation, and is accordingly, dubbed ‘Lex Orbán,’ is widely understood as designed to prevent five-time Hungarian PM and Fidesz president Viktor Orbán from returning to power.

The bill was approved with 135 votes in favour, 50 against, and 6 abstentions. 

Viktor Orbán commented on social media, under a card that says “It does not [just] affect me. It is about me.” 

Lex Orbán approved. This was the most pressing issue [for the new government]. When I am needed, I’ll be here.

Retroactive laws are usually seen as contrary to the ideals of the rule of law. Whether they are acceptable depends on the legal tradition and the justification offered.

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