Magyar's parliamentary majority in Hungary increases after final count


FILE PHOTO: Magyar, leader of the opposition Tisza Party, speaks during a press conference a day after the parliamentary election, in which Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban conceded defeat, Budapest, Hungary, April 13, 2026. REUTERS/Marton Monus/File Photo

BUDAPEST, April 18 (Reuters) - Hungarian ⁠election winner Peter Magyar's Tisza party has increased its parliamentary supermajority to 141 seats out ⁠of 199 after the processing of postal, foreign mission, and transferred votes, the election ‌office said on Saturday.

Centre-right Tisza (Respect and Freedom) won a landslide victory in Sunday's election, ending the 16-year rule of right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban that became a template for many conservative rulers across the West.

Orban quickly conceded after Magyar unexpectedly secured a ​sweeping majority amid record turnout, a result that could allow him ⁠to overhaul Orban's contested rule-of-law reforms.

"An ⁠unprecedented majority, an unprecedented mandate, and at the same time, responsibility," Magyar said in a statement on ⁠the ‌final result.

Highlighting the scale of the political shift, Orban's Fidesz party, which won 87 of 106 single-member constituencies at the 2022 election, won just 10 on Sunday and will have 52 ⁠lawmakers in parliament.

HUNGARIAN ASSETS BOLSTERED BY MAGYAR'S VICTORY

Magyar's victory has ​triggered a rally in Hungarian ‌assets on hopes for a reset in EU ties strained by years of conflict under ⁠Orban and the possible ​release of billions of EU funding suspended over reforms that Brussels says undermine democracy.

"While a successful unlocking of EU funds would support investment and lower sovereign risk premia, the impact on growth will materialise primarily over the ⁠medium term," Capital Economics analyst Liam Peach said in a ​note.

"In the near term, the outlook remains shaped by external factors – notably the Iran conflict – and domestic fiscal policy."

A preliminary tally had put the number of Tisza lawmakers at 138, already exceeding the two-thirds majority ⁠Magyar needed to undo Orban's constitutional overhaul and tackle corruption. The final count rose to 141 once all votes were tallied.

EU FUNDS COULD BOOST HUNGARY'S STAGNANT ECONOMY

Magyar has pledged to launch a sweeping anti-corruption drive after taking office on May 9 or 10 as part of wider efforts to secure the ​release of EU funds and revive an economy that has been near ⁠stagnation for the past three years.

Orban has regularly denied any wrongdoing and said Hungary was no more ​corrupt than other European countries.

However, in an online interview on Thursday, ‌the veteran leader said widespread media reports about ​wealth accumulated by businessmen close to Fidesz had likely contributed to his defeat. He did not comment on the accuracy of the reports.

(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs. Editing by Mark Potter)

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