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European Tech Sovereignty
17MAY

Magyar sets 9 May sitting; Hungary locked out

3 min read
14:28UTC

Péter Magyar's Tisza party confirmed the new Hungarian National Assembly convenes on 9 May, with a "government of experts" targeted for the first week of May. Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic were locked out of the EU's €90 billion borrowing mechanism.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Kyiv's €90 billion disbursement now runs on a Budapest cabinet calendar, not a Brussels one.

Péter Magyar, whose Tisza Party won 138 of 199 seats on 12 April , announced a "government of experts" and confirmed the new national assembly will convene on Saturday 9 May 1. The constitutional deadline for the first session is Tuesday 12 May . Magyar is targeting the first week of May for government formation. Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic were excluded from the EU's joint borrowing mechanism for the €90 billion Ukraine loan.

The veto broke on Wednesday 22 April; the funding question past mid-May did not. Magyar's MEPs voted against the loan in Strasbourg even as his predecessor's veto was removed in Brussels. His platform commits Hungary to a national referendum on Ukraine's EU accession. The Tisza supermajority gives the incoming government constitutional-rewriting authority over the Hungarian basic law, over Fidesz appointees in courts and state media, and over the veto Budapest chooses to cast on successor EU packages. Removing the Council veto on this loan is one vote a new Budapest government will cast; funding Kyiv past mid-May, and past a later accession plebiscite, is a separate calculation.

The disbursement geometry has shifted accordingly. European Commission officials had said funds could flow within days once the veto lifted, but the Council vote has to be re-staged after Hungary formally changes its position, and analysts now place first disbursement in June at the earliest. Anita Orbán is reported as the frontrunner for the Hungarian Foreign Ministry under the Magyar cabinet, a signal that the ministerial pick is the variable that will show whether the Tisza majority delivers continuity with parts of the Orbán-era administrative apparatus or a clean EU-facing break. The veto is lifted; the funding calendar is not.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Péter Magyar is the leader of Hungary's new governing party, Tisza, which won the April election with 53.6% of the vote. He announced his new government will be a 'government of experts' and confirmed that Hungary's new parliament will meet for the first time on 9 May, with a constitutional deadline of 12 May to form a government. This matters for Ukraine because Hungary's incoming government will determine whether the Brussels aid package can actually reach Kyiv: disbursement requires Hungary's formal participation in the lending instrument. Complicating matters: Magyar's own MEPs voted against the loan in the European Parliament on the same day the veto was lifted.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Magyar's Tisza MEPs voting against the €90 billion loan in Strasbourg, while his predecessor's Council veto was simultaneously removed in Brussels, signals Hungarian ambivalence toward Ukraine aid that could emerge as a disbursement condition dispute after government formation.

    Short term · 0.7
  • Consequence

    Hungary's exclusion from the EU joint borrowing mechanism, alongside Slovakia and Czech Republic, is a structural EU decision that persists regardless of which government is in Budapest. Magyar's government will need to negotiate re-entry to the mechanism or accept that Hungary receives loan proceeds via a different legal instrument.

    Short term · 0.8
  • Opportunity

    Anita Orbán as reported Foreign Ministry frontrunner: an energy security specialist: suggests Magyar's government may attempt to convert the Druzhba access issue from a blocking tool into a bilateral negotiating asset, potentially unlocking a more stable long-term arrangement between Budapest and Kyiv on energy transit.

    Medium term · 0.5
  • Precedent

    Magyar's platform commitment to a referendum on Ukraine's EU accession creates a long-term institutional complication: even a pro-European Hungarian government may be constitutionally required to hold a domestic vote that could produce an anti-accession result, extending Ukraine's accession timeline regardless of Magyar's personal preferences.

    Long term · 0.6
First Reported In

Update #14 · Kyiv's Druzhba gambit unlocks €90bn loan

Euronews· 24 Apr 2026
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