Factbox-Key facts about Sunday's election in Hungary and possible outcomes


FILE PHOTO: People listen to the speech of the Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, not pictured, during an election campaign rally in Gyor, Hungary, March 27, 2026. REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo/File Photo

BUDAPEST, April 10 (Reuters) - Hungarians vote in a landmark ⁠parliamentary election on Sunday that is being closely watched in the European Union, the United States, Russia and beyond.

Opinion polls ⁠suggest that Prime Minister Viktor Orban and his nationalist Fidesz party will lose power after 16 years to the ‌centre-right, pro-European Union Tisza party, led by former Orban loyalist Peter Magyar.

Here is some key information on Hungary's political system and a list of possible outcomes of the election.

HOW THE VOTING GOES

Hungarian voters will elect 199 members of parliament - 106 of them in single-member constituencies under a first-past-the-post system and the other 93 from national party ​and ethnic minority lists.

Orban's government gave ethnic Hungarians living abroad the right to citizenship, ⁠and they can vote on party lists, by letter. ⁠According to National Election Office data, close to 500,000 such citizens have been registered for the 2026 election. The vast majority of ⁠them ‌traditionally support Orban's Fidesz.

Those with a registered Hungarian address must vote in person - at a polling station in Hungary or, if abroad, at one of Hungary's official representations.

For individual parties, the threshold to get into parliament is winning 5% of votes.

Polling stations ⁠open on Sunday at 6 a.m. (0400 GMT) and close at 7 p.m. (1700 GMT). The ​results should become clear by late Sunday ‌evening.

WHAT HAPPENS AFTER THE ELECTION?

President Tamas Sulyok will convene the new parliament within 30 days of the election, probably in ⁠May. In 2022 the ​election took place on April 3 and the new parliament convened on May 2.

The prime minister is elected by parliament, with a simple majority of votes. Hungary's president submits a proposal for prime minister -- usually the candidate of the winning party - and parliament then votes on the nomination.

If parliament fails to ⁠elect the person proposed, the president presents a new proposal within 15 days.

If ​parliament fails to elect a new prime minister again, the president can dissolve parliament and call a new election.

WHAT ARE THE POSSIBLE OUTCOMES OF THE ELECTION?

Budapest-based think tank Political Capital outlined what it sees as the possible scenarios on Friday:

Two-thirds constitutional Fidesz majority: This would allow Fidesz to ⁠further reshape institutions without constraint and institutional autonomy in Hungary would decline further.

Significant Fidesz majority: A significant majority would allow Fidesz to continue its current policies, with foreign policy likely remaining largely unchanged.

Narrow Fidesz majority: This would create a new and uncertain political situation, with a fragile balance of power and increased pressure from the opposition.

Two-thirds Tisza majority: This would enable deep institutional reform and allow the new government ​to restructure key institutions.

Significant Tisza majority: This would allow for limited yet meaningful change but would ⁠not provide a robust legal mandate for deep institutional reform. Political dynamics would remain tense.

Narrow Tisza majority: This would create an unstable and high-risk ​governing situation with a fragile balance of power. The election results could be contested, ‌possibly leading to mass protests.

No clear winner: A stalemate would result in ​a fragmented political landscape, where no major actor can form a stable government alone. The far-right Mi Hazank (Our Homeland) party could become a kingmaker and the formation of coalitions could be uncertain and prolonged.

(Reporting by Krisztina ThanEditing by Gareth Jones)

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