
Hungary’s Election Day Set for April 12
President Tamás Sulyok’s announcement comes as surveys show Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz maintaining a narrow but stable lead.

President Tamás Sulyok’s announcement comes as surveys show Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz maintaining a narrow but stable lead.

Benjamin Netanyahu said the world needs more leaders like the Hungarian prime minister, while Javier Milei said Viktor Orbán has made Hungary a bastion of the Western world in a Europe that is being engulfed by darkness.

The PM said Hungary faces a choice between peace and war, between safeguarding national interests and giving in to Brussels.

A survey from a U.S. polling company reports an overwhelming majority of Hungarians opposing the Tisza party’s austerity proposals.

The leak of an alleged plan by the opposition to raise taxes drastically sharpens the contrast between two choices in the April elections.

The Hungarian prime minister’s political adviser described the modification of the aggregate chart as “blatant data tampering.”

The Dutch and Hungarian Patriots embody a movement aiming to turn rising conservative momentum into lasting political power.

The gathering’s central message was clear: less Brussels and more Italy.

Doomsday reports on Hungary’s economy are everywhere—but most read more like wishful thinking than real analysis.

“History will judge this Commission and the pro-migration politicians harshly. Until that day comes, we’ll continue defending our citizens.”