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Viktor Orbán concedes defeat after 'painful' election result

apnews.com

262 points by hackernj a month ago · 108 comments

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chollida1 a month ago

Sad commentary on the modern world where my first thought was, well good for Orban to concede defeat. Not all current world heads of state have that much maturity.

This bodes well for the midterm state of the European union.

  • analog31 a month ago

    Peaceful transition of power is definitely something to cheer about.

    • ahofmann a month ago

      Sadly so. In the last decades it was just normal for almost all countries. It's kind of maddening how low Trump lowered the bar for politicians.

  • mstade a month ago

    As a fellow European this is the biggest surprise of the election, I thought for sure he'd pull a Trump.

    • crop_rotation a month ago

      Pulling a Trump requires a polarized electorate where you are mostly going to have both parties in 48-52% range, with only real fights in few battleground states, and no absurd change in total vote %. Even Trump won't pull a Trump if other party was nearing 2/3rd majority. I am not even sure of what would happen to American politics if a party reaches 2/3rd majority in both houses, a list of long pending reforms might finally become possible.

      • derdi a month ago

        It's worth noting that the party vote share here was 53% for Tisza vs. 44% for the even-more-right-wing parties. The fact that this results in a two thirds majority is because the electoral system inflates the strongest party. Orbán has previously achieved two thirds majorities multiple times while winning less than 50% of the party vote. Most seats are assigned not through party lists but in single-member constituencies with first-past-the-post voting, same as in America. So it's not "convince two thirds of the people to vote for you", it's "convince a very slim plurality in two thirds of the constituencies to vote for you".

        • jacquesm a month ago

          Let's hope they fix that little loophole before the next election.

          • derdi a month ago

            I'd like that. But this system is very attractive for the strongest party, so it will be a real test of their commitment to actually representative, multi-party democracy. Also, the general system (a mix of single-member constituencies and party list seats, with more of the former than the latter) isn't a Fidesz invention, it has a long legal tradition in Hungary. So there might be a lot of resistance to a purer party-list system on those grounds too.

            Obvious tweaks exist, of course: Even if you keep more individual constituencies than party list seats, they should use some sort of instant runoff/ranked choice/etc. system. But other first past the post countries are dragging their feet on this too, so... we'll see.

            • jacquesm a month ago

              It's a bit like computer security: you have to get it right all of the time and the perps mostly only need one shot at being lucky and then it will takes many years to undo the damage.

              We should approach democracy more with the kind of insight that go into making computers secure. Oh, wait...

      • stefan_ a month ago

        Also an election system designed for horseback.

        • dd8601fn a month ago

          I think it's pretty damn brilliant. I see the failure to maintain it as intended as the real shortcoming.

      • tromp a month ago

        If anyone can bring about enough disappointment and disgust for 2/3 of the population to vote Democrat, it is Trump.

    • esbranson a month ago

      Getting arrested after losing an election? Or getting arrested as an opposition candidate in an election which he later won?

  • esbranson a month ago

    No, this is not sad commentary on the modern world.

imartin2k a month ago

I suspected he would lose when he was recently visited and supported by Vance. Nobody likes Vance (in Europe, and probably anywhere). Getting prominent backing by an unlikable character isn’t a winning strategy.

  • derdi a month ago

    Also, the fact of faking a terror attack and everybody just shrugging it off as an obvious Russian false flag op. I think even Orbán understood at that point that the jig was up.

    • tim333 a month ago

      One thing that's surprised me over the last few years is how much Russia messes with global politics. It seems to seeping into public consciousness so instead of being seen as a bit of a conspiracy theory you now have the crowds shouting Russia out. I don't know if that'll effect other Russia backed projects like Brexit financed by Russia via Arron Banks and Trump, financed by the "We have all the funding we need out of Russia" stuff. It doesn't seem illegal but the voters may be getting fed up with it all?

tomalaci a month ago

Amazing news for EU! If Tisza can get supermajority after votes are counted then they can also easily reverse a lot of constitutional corruption in Hungary done by Orban.

comrade1234 a month ago

Flagged due to sour grapes.

  • Symbiote a month ago

    My guess is it's flagged by Americans (it's their daytime) who don't realize the significance of this result to the EU and potentially the EU's response to the war in Ukraine.

    • salawat a month ago

      You know, I took a second look at it, and weirdly enough, I can't vouch it for some reason. That's odd. Grats to the good folks across the pond though! May we be so lucky when next our transition is scheduled!

      • DamnInteresting a month ago

        > You know, I took a second look at it, and weirdly enough, I can't vouch it for some reason.

        The 'vouch' option doesn't appear until/unless the post becomes [dead].

    • burnt-resistor a month ago

      Probably flagged by MAGA and pro-Kremlin aligned accounts who dislike the results and uppercase Liberal limousine establishment Democrats who try to censor every view they don't already agree with. If these were normal times, the I'd say keep sex, religion, and politics private except not the latter when liberal democratic politicians, speech-debate, and journalism are/were under fire in many sectors and countries. I'm hoping with this result that Hungary will experience much greater press and personal freedom.. and the corruption will hopefully be exposed more widely similar to Caolan Robertson only hinting at some of the extravagant emoluments and embezzlement. https://youtu.be/HiayCdysN04

    • jredwards a month ago

      American here. I was at a party when I saw the news and gleefully announced it to the table I was sitting at. We were all pleased with both the result and the concession.

      ...we know.

    • surgical_fire a month ago

      Eh, I guess that people that flagged it know quite well what this result mean to the EU, they just hate it because they want to see the EU fail.

  • FeloniousHam a month ago

    Probably flagged because of lack of tech relevance.

    (I listen Ukraine: The Latest daily, I'm reasonably up-to-date big issue European politics).

    • consumer451 a month ago

      This is a hugely important geopolitical event, and mods here often override flagging in such cases.

      Here is an example of HN moderation going the other way, when it favored a right-leaning narrative:

      https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34712496

      It is getting more and more difficult for me to see moderation here as unbiased. The charitable take is that people are often not aware of their biases. I am sure I suffer from that to some extent, though I really try to go out of my way to be self-aware about this. And yes, of course this comment could be evidence of my own bias.

    • deno a month ago
lysace a month ago

Welcome back to Europe, Hungary.

  • jacquesm a month ago

    Time will tell. Keep in mind that his successor was part of Orban's party in the past.

    • lysace a month ago

      From your perspective as afaik nowadays a Californian progressive: Don't let perfect be the enemy of good.

      • jacquesm a month ago

        Yes, that's true. But there is enough about Magyar that I don't understand that I'm cautiously optimistic. Though it would be hard to imagine worse than Orban...

        JD Vance strikes again. I wonder how long it will take US politicians and assorted billionaires to realize that their 'endorsements' will backfire.

        • salawat a month ago

          Shhhh. Don't correct your enemy while they are busy making mistakes. Just smile and wave.

        • cjbenedikt a month ago

          "...will take US politicians and assorted billionaires to realize that their 'endorsements' will backfire..." They may have to switch off their AI and start using their own brain - should they still have one, that is.

    • flopsamjetsam a month ago

      I don't know much about him, only that he was in the same party. I have heard that he is pro-EU and anti-Russia though, is that true?

      • jacquesm a month ago

        Pro-EU: probably. Anti-Russia: also probably.

        For both: I prefer to see it all rather than to assume it will be fine. Oh, and we still have Fico to deal with. But at least Hungarians have chosen against Orban that in itself gives some hope. Those leaked phone calls that were made public in the last weeks were very damning, I always assumed that such stuff was going on but to have hard proof is on another level.

        I wonder what they're going to do with the participants. And what Orban's plans are now that he's in the opposition. I would not count him out just yet, he's got Putin's backing and you can bet they'll work overtime to try to destabilize Magyar's government. The rot goes pretty deep and it will take a lot of work to undo all that damage.

        • tpm a month ago

          Orban is only 63; it's up to him what he will do but there is a certain type of people that could live happily on their own island with all the money they have stolen but they prefer to do evil to their last day. See for example Babis, delegating the ownership of his huge company to a trust fund so he can be a prime minister again at 70. Or indeed our great leader Fico who is in politics like Orban since '89, was prime minister around 15 years of the last 20, probably stolen billions for himself, was shot, nearly killed, and doesn't look like he wants to give up his power anytime soon.. and he's still only 62.

          • kiwike a month ago

            If nothing goes catastrophically wrong (again), Orban won't be allowed to return as a prime minister. One of the first legislation the new government aims to pass is to maximize the number of terms to two (8 years in power) which Orban already surpassed. Of course, they could always pull a Putin and put him in a presidential chair and shift power from the parliament/prime minister, so let's hope Fidesz never gets that level of support ever again.

          • jacquesm a month ago

            With Orban much reduced in power Fico's days are numbered.

            But Orban will hang around, if only to do more of Putin's bidding, it's up to Magyar & the new government now to deal with Orban and his spies in a way that they won't be able to do a come-back.

            • tpm a month ago

              Not really, Fico has survived a lot during his 4 decades in politics and was always able to adapt (to our detriment). His political survival does not depend on Orban, even though they were close the last couple of years.

              • jacquesm a month ago

                That's absolutely true. But in a European context he's already vowed that he will now take up Orban's mantel in blockading EU assistance to Ukraine and other tricks. That means he will no longer be able to hide his involvement and I'm pretty sure that the same kind of conversations between Lavrov and Hungarian politicians can be found about Fico & company. They are clearly not acting in Slovakia's long term interests and that's something that can be much more openly discussed. Keeping in mind that Slovakia is only 1/3rd of so of the size economy as Hungary makes it less of a problem to begin with.

                Strength to you, it must be super hard to be living under politicians that are ripping off your country in such a blatant manner on behalf of what is nominally now an enemy nation (based on their own statements), especially given what your country had to endure in the years before the fall of the USSR.

                • tpm a month ago

                  I think generally western EU has no idea how unbelievably corrupt these regimes (Fico, Orbana, Babis) are... they are not stealing on behalf of Putin, they are stealing for themselves, and they are oriented towards Russia because they dream of having Putin's unchecked power.

                  Luckily I don't think Fico will help Putin that much because nobody trusts him anymore, his foreign minister is very weak and as you mention Slovakia is no economical heavyweight. The hardest thing for us is to see the brainwashed masses still voting for Fico or worse still actual nazis.

      • orwin a month ago

        Yes, he basically have the same views, except on Russia. One advantage though is that Orban put his people at the head of Hungary corporations, so maybe that will end and the corruption will be kept at "normal" levels.

        • dbdr a month ago

          > A country where no one is stigmatized for loving someone differently than the majority.

          -- Peter Magyar victory speech, April 12, 2026

          That's directly in opposition to Orban's views and homophobic laws.

          • orwin a month ago

            Shit, i didn't realize, his name is really Magyar? I thought it was a surname. What a name for Hungary's president

            • dbdr a month ago

              On a similar note, François Hollande had the right first name but the wrong last name!

      • dbdr a month ago

        "Russians go home" was one of the main chants at opposition rallies. In 2026 like in 1989.

    • mandeepj a month ago

      They all start from the same root whether Trump (once a democrat), BJP (part of congress, oldest political party in India)

surgical_fire a month ago

Good. I visited Hungary years ago, and I loved the time I spent there. It saddened me a bit to see its sliding into autocracy and being relegated to be a Russian vassal state.

Hopefully the damage Orban caused to Hugarian institutions get reversed.

croisillon a month ago

contesting election results untruthfully always existed, but since 2021 the result is not the headline anymore, the concession is

seper8 a month ago

Thank god Vance showed up to support him!

  • ceejayoz a month ago

    Vance also knocked off Pope Francis, and the Iran deal last night. Maybe we can send him to Moscow next.

    • seper8 a month ago

      I bet Viktor felt too uncomfortable to tell him "no please don't come stay in the USA, you are political poison"

  • cosmicgadget a month ago

    Yes but has Orban even said thank you?

  • JojoFatsani a month ago

    Vance is on track to replace Dan Quayle at the bottom of the Civ leader rankings.

Scipio_Afri a month ago

Why is this and all other posts about this flagged?

workfromspace a month ago

Happy for Hungary!

Unfortunatlely, half democracies (ie representative) are open to abuse and give too much power to presidents or governments. Combined with populism, lobbying and corruption, it allows people like Orban to stay in power for a long time. Glad it's over.

  • thomassmith65 a month ago

    Happy for Hungary, the EU, the planet. The sooner the world falls out of love with populism and illiberalism, the better.

Whatarethese a month ago

It really feels like the tides are turning against the cancer that is populism.

card_zero a month ago

Ooooh. I didn't think it would happen. This disturbs the balance a bit.

  • stefs a month ago

    which balance? orban was a parasite, trying to embezzle as much money from the EU without getting the boot (hungary as the biggest per-head receiver of EU funds), while probably also getting paid by russia - a hostile actor - for his actions (i.e. sabotaging the union and sowing dissent through propaganda). there was no balance there.

    • card_zero a month ago

      OK then, some other metaphor to say it allows things to change and allows escape from a static situation. It releases the brakes?

sph a month ago

It all seems so easy, despite the efforts of Putin and the US to support a guy that was there for almost two decades. I wonder if the incumbent party is, somehow, in the pocket of those fascists. I have a hard time accepting they’d just shrug and move on from being able to control a puppet state that’s the thorn in EU’s side.

Any reason not to be so cynical? I am unfamiliar with the details of Hungarian politics, but I can’t help wondering if it is staged. And why would Orbán just roll over after all this time in power?

  • anal_reactor a month ago

    > I have a hard time accepting they’d just shrug and move on from being able to control a puppet state that’s the thorn in EU’s side.

    What can they realistically do? Invade Hungary?

    > And why would Orbán just roll over after all this time in power?

    What can he realistically do? A coup? With such a devastating defeat this would only lead to massive protests, which would completely ruin his political career. Meanwhile he can take a step back and think how to get back to the game in the next election.

    As bad as Orban was, and as manipulated the election process was, he always won using legit votes. Which was both his strength and his weakness.

Jamesbeam a month ago

I knew the projections were looking really grim for Orban after watching JD Vance putting Trump on speakerphone five days ago during his Hungary visit. That was awkward.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GUoCvIMrgc

They must be really tired of winning by now.

What? 4$ gas until November Mr.President? Who doesn’t love paying 30% more for Gas out of their pocket for a war that is already won. Tremendous work Mr. President. A capital V victory.

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