Image: Wikipedia.
Viktor Orbán, the prime minister of Hungary since 2010, suffered a humiliating defeat (April 12th) after a record turnout of roughly 77.8 percent. His challenger, the center-right candidate Péter Magyar and his Tisza party, won 136 of 199 seats in Hungary’s parliament, or about 68 percent.
Hungarian and American academics, especially scientists in pursuit of truth, popped open bottles of champagne, spraying rooms across the land like baseball players winning the World Series. After all, Trump and his MAGA followers idolized Viktor Orbán. His record of achievement served as a template, but it’s gone down in flames. This is a stab in the heart of the nationalist right.
According to a BBC headline, “Péter Magyar’s historic win offers peace for a country exhausted by the tensions of Viktor Orbán’s rule.”
Viktor Orbán was Trump’s personal coach in championing nationalistic grievances and attacking academic institutions. Orbán specialized in demonstrating how quickly democratic institutions can be dismantled and opposition voices silenced. He was the European leader with by far the closest ties to Trump’s MAGA movement, illustrated by Vice President JD Vance’s visit to Budapest to endorse his election, a big mistake that incentivized more disgruntled voters than ever before.
“Orban’s closeness to the MAGA movement is now seen as a double-edged sword by some far-right politicians, with Trump’s threats to seize Greenland and the war with Iran contributing to his unpopularity in Europe. Orban’s ‘ostentatious friendship’ with the current U.S. administration ‘hung like millstones around Orban’s neck,’ wrote Alternative for Germany lawmaker Matthias Moosdorf on X on Monday.” (Source: Orban’s Defeat Topples a Pillar of Europe’s Far Right, Prompts Scrutiny of MAGA Links, Reuters, April 14, 2026)
According to YouGov: How Popular is Donald Trump in Europe? March 2026:
UK – Trump favorable 14%, unfavorable 81%
France – Trump favorable 14%, unfavorable 78%
Germany – Trump favorable 10%, unfavorable 86%
Italy – Trump favorable 12%, unfavorable 80%
Spain – Trump favorable 15%, unfavorable 83%
Denmark – Trump favorable 3%, unfavorable 94%
According to a Gallup World Poll, US leadership approval has fallen to 31% while disapproval has skyrocketed to a new all-time high of 48%. China’s approval rating increased to 36%. (Gallup News, April 3, 2026)
“Over time, Orbán also became more than a Hungarian leader: He became a transnational symbol for the authoritarian and nationalist right. He cultivated close ties with President Trump, hosted CPAC in Budapest, and positioned Hungary as a model for right-wing populists across Europe and the United States. Trump repeatedly praised Orbán… Viktor Orbán’s defeat in Hungary signals a repudiation of corrupt governance and a blow for the global authoritarian movement—including Trump.” (Orbán’s Defeat in the Hungarian Election Signals a Blow to the Global Authoritarian Movement, CAP, April 14, 2026)
Based upon events to-date in America, Trump and Orbán ostensibly show strikingly similar issues with the voting public: “Orbán entered this election facing public frustration over a stagnant economy and rising costs, all exacerbated by his party’s corruption that used public funds for personal gain,” Ibid. Corruption issues seem to stick with voters like Loctite Super Glue.
According to a highly respected STATNews’article: U.S. Universities Are Becoming Political Hostages in the Orbanization of Knowledge, d/d September 9, 2025: ”When an authoritarian sets out to dismantle a democracy, they rarely begin with tanks in the streets. They start with the institutions that shape how a nation understands itself — its universities, its research labs, its spaces for free inquiry. In Hungary, Viktor Orbán perfected this slow-motion coup against knowledge. Now, the same playbook is being followed here by the Trump administration and Project 2025.”
In Hungary, if scholars dissented, they found their funding eliminated or their departments shuttered. In America, funding was eliminated before scholars had an opportunity to dissent.
Yet, “When governments politicize science, the damage ripples outward — shrinking innovation capacity, degrading higher education quality, and eroding a country’s economic future. In both Hungary and the U.S., the sectors under attack are the same ones that generate the technologies, medicines, and trained minds that sustain national prosperity and well-being… Currently in the U.S., faculty coalitions and university alliances are warning that the political capture of education and science are a direct threat to the republic,” Ibid.
The results of Orbán’s policies have been a disaster for Hungary. Brain drain has accelerated with one-in-four researchers looking to leave the country The 37% population decline in Hungary over the past 10 years is due to emigration, especially the highly educated. Meantime, EU sanctions cut off access to Erasmus and Horizon Europe funding and severed international research partnerships. As a result, innovation has slowed and competitiveness is noticeably slipping.
Orbán has exposed the fragility of authoritarianism, especially when pissed off voters come out in numbers, nearly 80% of the voting public in Hungary. People still count. And it’s impossible to ignore or hide a 68% vote for democracy.
How did center-right candidate Péter Magyar and his Tisza party win 136 of 199 seats in Hungary’s parliament? He accomplished it with a pro-European message and with direct attacks on (1) corruption, (2) institutional decay, and (3) Orbán’s increasingly isolated foreign policy. Hmm.
