After 16 years in power, Putin’s closest friend in Europe faces a pivotal election



He is no liberal, but rather a moderate conservative figure who has seized on Hungariansโ€™ dissatisfaction with rising living costs, corruption and crumbling public services.

Orbรกnโ€™s pitch has largely centered around Russiaโ€™s war in neighboring Ukraine. He has singled out Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for frequent attacks, echoing his earlier campaigns that heavily targeted the political influence of George Soros, the Jewish Hungarian American billionaire philanthropist โ€” a tactic that has drawn accusations of antisemitism and the fueling of conspiracy theories.

In the run-up to the vote, Orbรกn accused Ukraine of sabotaging a key oil pipeline, while Hungarian authorities seized a shipment of cash from a Ukrainian bank.

The Hungarian leader says that the war should be finished as quickly as possible, not prolonged by further Western support for Ukraine. He argues this is about Hungaryโ€™s border security and energy independence, but opponents say it has more to do with pleasing his friends in the Kremlin.

The rest of Orbรกnโ€™s pitch is similar to the playbook he has deployed previously, painting the vote as an existential struggle against liberal values, immigration and what he calls โ€œgender ideology,โ€ having already imposed a ban on Pride marches and LGBTQ events that provoked international condemnation.

โ€œWe must save Western civilization,โ€ he told a rally Tuesday alongside Vance. โ€œTo do this, we must fight the progressives nestled in Brussels, we must end the Russian-Ukrainian war, and we must solve the energy crisis.โ€

In Budapest ahead of the vote, people were divided on whether Orbรกnโ€™s long political rule could really come to an end.

โ€œA lot of people are bored of the Orbรกn system โ€” the last 15 years has been enough,โ€ said Mate Khoor, 46, a hotel owner and Fidesz party member from the small village of Csรณr who was in the crowd at the Orbรกn-Vance rally. โ€œBut Orbรกn is strong and the party is strong,โ€ he said. โ€œI think it can be a big win. I donโ€™t think Peter Magyar will win this election.โ€

More hopeful about Magyarโ€™s chances is Anna Fetter, 27, who has just moved back to Hungary after 10 years in the United States. She said that it felt โ€œreally daunting and unwelcoming to liveโ€ in the U.S., citing Trumpโ€™s anti-immigrant rhetoric and raids by ICE.

She was one of a handful of protesters outside the Orbรกn-Vance news conference in the heart of Budapest. Now back in her homeland, she hopes that Trumpโ€™s allies will be outvoted this Sunday, adding: โ€œI am a supporter of change.โ€

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