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European Tech Sovereignty
30JUN

Tisza Leads Polls but EU Loan Faces June Delay

2 min read
17:31UTC

Hungary's Tisza party led polls by 19 points heading into the 12 April election, but its prior vote against the EU's EUR 90 billion Ukraine loan means first disbursement is unlikely before June even if Tisza wins.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Even a Tisza win leaves a 4-6 week gap between election and EU loan disbursement, threatening Ukraine's mid-May resource deadline.

The 21 Research Institute poll showed Tisza at 56% versus Fidesz at 37% among decided voters, with Medián projecting a possible two-thirds supermajority. Peter Magyar's party, however, voted against the EUR 90 billion package in the European Parliament. Magyar's national referendum commitment on EU accession introduces a further constraint on rapid action.

EU Commission optimism, that funds could flow "within a few days" of veto removal, rests on completed technical groundwork. The political steps are more complex: a new Hungarian government must be formed, ministers confirmed, and the Council vote restructured. Analysts place earliest disbursement in June.

Ukraine faces resource depletion by mid-May . If June is correct and depletion is real, Ukraine faces a four to six week vulnerability window even under an optimistic scenario. The TurkStream incident on 5 April may narrow Tisza's margin, extending the timeline further.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Hungary's opposition Tisza party is well ahead in polls before the 12 April election. If Tisza wins, Hungary would likely stop blocking a large EU loan to Ukraine. However, analysts say the money probably cannot arrive until June — and Ukraine is expected to run out of key resources by mid-May. Tisza previously voted against this specific loan in the European Parliament, suggesting they may not rush to approve it.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Ukraine faces a 4-6 week gap between a potential Tisza election win (12 April) and earliest possible EUR 90 billion disbursement (June), coinciding with mid-May resource depletion.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Russia Sells Less Oil but Earns More

Euronews / 21 Research Institute· 5 Apr 2026
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