Sunday, April 12, 2026

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Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán concedes defeat in key election, ending 16 years in power


Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is set to lose the national election, with opposition leader Peter Magyar set to win a large majority in parliament. It is a bombshell result in an election seen as one of Europe’s most consequential this year.

Orban, the longest-serving leader in the European Union and a longtime ally of President Trump, conceded defeat Sunday night after what he called a “painful” election result, ending 16 years in power.

“I congratulated the victorious party,″ Orbán told supporters in Budapest. “We are going to serve the Hungarian nation and our homeland from opposition as well.”

Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban addresses supporters at the Balna centre in Budapest during a general election in Hungary, on April 12, 2026. 

Attila KISBENEDEK /AFP via Getty Images


In a Facebook post on Sunday, Magyar said that Orban conceded to him in a phone call. “Prime Minister Viktor Orbán just congratulated me on the phone on our victory,” Magyar wrote.

Early official results, with 37% of the voting in, show Magyar’s party holding an 11-point lead over Orban’s party. That proportion will change as more votes are counted.

Addressing his supporters earlier Sunday evening, Magyar said that up to 6 million Hungarians had voted in Sunday’s election, in a country that has little more than 9 million people. 

HUNGARY-POLITICS-VOTE

Peter Magyar, leader of the pro-European conservative TISZA party, makes a statement in Budapest during the general election in Hungary, on April 12, 2026.

Ferenc ISZA /AFP via Getty Images


Magyar said that despite receiving thousands of reports of election tampering, he was “cautiously optimistic” of victory.

Earlier on Sunday, speaking to reporters after casting his ballot, Orbán, 62, said the campaign had been “a great national moment on our side” and thanked activists and supporters for their work.

Independent watchdogs and European Union officials have accused Orbán’s government of launching a sustained assault on the country’s democratic institutions and rule of law since. In the 16 years since he took office in 2010, the country has descended to the rank of the most corrupt country in the European Union, according to the U.K.-based anti-corruption group Transparency International.

At a polling station in Budapest on Sunday, CBS News spoke to a handful of voters, all of whom said they were voting for Magyar and his center-right Tiscza party.

“Orban is very anti-EU and pro-Russia, and I think that aligning yourself with, in my opinion, a war criminal, is not good for the country of Hungary,” said a 21-year-old who only identified himself as Daniel.

Casting his ballot in Budapest on Sunday, Marcell Mehringer, 21, said he was voting “primarily so that Hungary will finally be a so-called European country, and so that young people, and really everyone, will do their fundamental civic duty to unite this nation a bit and to break down these boundaries borne of hatred.”

Hungary Heads to the Polls

Peter Magyar, leader of the Tisza party, prepares to vote at a polling station during parliamentary elections in Budapest, Hungary, on Sunday, April 12, 2026.

Akos Stiller / Bloomberg via Getty Images


Orbán has been one of Mr. Trump’s closest global allies since the U.S. president was first elected in 2016. The relationship has deepened between the two men over the past decade. The partnership between the Trump administration and Orbán was on full display when Vice President JD Vance publicly campaigned alongside the Hungarian leader in Budapest last week.

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