Hungary's Tisza party submits bill to overhaul public media


FILE PHOTO: Peter 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, June 12 (Reuters) - Hungary's ⁠ruling Tisza party submitted legislation on Friday to overhaul public media, ⁠which critics at home and abroad say became a government ‌mouthpiece under former right-wing leader Viktor Orban.

Public media reform was a key pledge by Prime Minister Peter Magyar's Tisza party, which ousted Orban in an April election landslide. A ​constitutional majority will enable Tisza to roll back ⁠Orban's reforms critics say have ⁠harmed democracy.

Following are key details from the legislation:

* The main goal of ⁠the ‌overhaul is to restore independent, transparent and accountable public-service broadcasting.

* The bill would restructure MTVA, a holding currently operating public media, ⁠splitting it into a company in charge of radio ​and television broadcasting ‌and reinstate a MTI as a standalone national news agency.

* The ⁠bill establishes the ​Independent Public Media Committee in charge of protecting the independence of public media, overseeing its operations and finances and taking part in the selection of its ⁠leadership.

* The Committee would be run on ​a parity basis, with equal representation for the government and the opposition as well as independent media sector representatives.

* A Public Media Council would monitor ⁠the principles of public service based on a Public Service Charter.

* The bill would also reform the Media Council, a body of the National Media and Infocommunications Authority, to ensure its makeup is more balanced and decisions ​are more transparent, while introducing stricter rules ⁠on conflict of interest.

* The reforms would terminate the mandates of current public ​media leaders, putting Culture Minister Zoltan Tarr ‌in charge of public media for an ​interim period, while new public media leaders are chosen in an open application process.

(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

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