Orban re-elected as Fidesz party leader in Hungary despite election loss


FILE PHOTO: Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban reacts as people applaud after the announcement of the partial results of parliamentary election in Budapest, Hungary, April 12, 2026. REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo/File Photo

BUDAPEST, June 13 (Reuters) - Hungary's ⁠main opposition Fidesz party re-elected former Prime Minister Viktor ⁠Orban as its leader on Saturday for another year despite ‌the party's loss of power in an April 12 election to the centre-right Tisza party.

Nationalist Orban, 62, provided inspiration for right-wing conservatives across Europe and the ​United States as the mastermind of what ⁠he called an "illiberal" model ⁠of democracy.

Orban's political future came into question after Fidesz's defeat and ⁠he ‌had faced pressure from some erstwhile loyalists to bow out of politics, the first such open criticism since he ⁠swept to power in 2010.

Some 729 delegates out ​of 737 voted ‌to re-elect Orban at Fidesz's party congress, state news agency ⁠MTI reported. ​There wereno challengers running against him.

"I do not give up, I never, never, never, never, never give up," Orban told the congress in ⁠a speech before the vote, reiterating that ​he took full responsibility for the party's election defeat.

Orban said Fidesz had been a "fantastic governing party" for 16 years but needed to ⁠undergo changes to become a functional opposition party that could become ready to govern again.

In the April election Prime Minister Peter Magyar's Tisza party won a two-thirds parliamentary majority, enough to reverse ​Orban's constitutional changes.

Fidesz has lost support since ⁠the election, according to opinion polls. A May survey by the Publicus ​Institute showed Tisza with 55% support, ‌up from the 53% it secured ​in the election, while backing for Fidesz fell to 17%, down from 39%.

(Reporting by Anita KomuvesEditing by Gareth Jones)

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