Viktor Orbán desxcribed the outcome of the election as "painful"/Photo: Getty
Orbán lost to Conservative Peter Magyar.
Viktor Orbán has formally acknowledged defeat to conservative newcomer Peter Magyar, bringing an end to his 16-year grip on Hungarian politics.
With approximately two-thirds of constituencies counted, Magyar’s TISZA party is projected to win a supermajority of 137 seats in the country’s 199-seat parliament.
Orbán called the results unambiguous and painful, confirming he had already reached out to congratulate the victorious party while admitting his government had not been given a fresh mandate by the electorate.

The outcome signals a major turning point for Hungary as Magyar — a former government insider who reinvented himself as a pro-European reformer — prepares to dismantle Orbán’s “illiberal democracy” in favour of an agenda centred on anti-corruption measures and public sector reform.
Related: Paul Kagame Set To Rule Rwanda For 30 Years After Election Win
The shift arrives on the back of record voter turnout of 77.8%, reflecting widespread public engagement with questions over the country’s economic future and its standing within the European Union.
Celebrations erupted among TISZA supporters across Budapest, while the mood outside the Fidesz press centre was notably subdued.
The election drew intense international scrutiny given Orbán’s well-documented ties to figures such as Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, alongside his long-running disputes with Brussels.
Throughout the campaign, Orbán leaned heavily on framing the Ukraine conflict as a direct threat to Hungarian national interests, while Magyar channelled widespread frustration over economic stagnation to his advantage.
Despite early claims of foreign meddling from both camps, the outgoing Orbán administration has since stated it does not consider any irregularities severe enough to undermine the legitimacy of the final result.

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