Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
9MAY

Tisza takes 137 seats; Orbán concedes

3 min read
17:21UTC

Péter Magyar's party won a constitutional supermajority on 12 April, ending sixteen years of Fidesz rule and handing Budapest the single vote that unblocks the €90bn EU loan for Ukraine.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The Hungarian veto on Ukraine funding is broken by turnout, not by diplomacy.

Péter Magyar's Tisza Party won 137 of 199 seats in Hungary's parliamentary election on 12 April with 52.1% of the party-list vote, a constitutional two-thirds supermajority. Fidesz-KDNP fell to 56 seats on 39.56%; Our Homeland Movement took 6 seats. Turnout hit 79.56%, nearly ten points above 2022. Viktor Orbán conceded on election night, ending sixteen years as prime minister.

The final independent Medián poll had placed Tisza at 58% against Fidesz 33%, the widest margin of the cycle. The result tracked that reading rather than the narrower pro-Fidesz Nézőpont numbers. A two-thirds majority is more than a governing margin. It is constitutional-rewriting authority: Magyar can amend the Hungarian basic law, remove Fidesz appointees from courts and state media, and withdraw Hungary's veto on the EU €90 billion Ukraine loan without needing a coalition partner.

The more awkward arithmetic sits inside Tisza itself. Its MEPs (Members of the European Parliament) voted against the €90bn loan at Strasbourg , and Magyar has committed to a national referendum on Ukraine's EU accession. Removing the Council veto 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 election broke the veto; the package still has to clear an electorate Tisza has promised to consult.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Hungary is a member of the European Union and has been blocking a major EU loan to Ukraine worth €90 billion. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who had been in power for sixteen years, was sympathetic to Russia and used Hungary's EU veto rights to obstruct aid to Ukraine. On 12 April, Hungarian voters elected a new government led by Péter Magyar and his Tisza Party, with a two-thirds parliamentary majority. A two-thirds majority means the new government can change Hungary's constitution and remove legal obstacles without needing to negotiate with anyone else. The key downstream effect for the broader conflict: once Magyar's government is formed and withdraws Hungary's veto, the EU loan to Ukraine can proceed. That loan would help fund Ukraine's defence. The new government is targeting 5 May for formation.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 79.56% turnout, nearly ten points above 2022, is the structural story. Fidesz's electoral architecture, gerrymandered single-member districts, state media dominance, civil society restrictions, was calibrated for turnout suppression in opposition strongholds.

When turnout normalises, the system's designed advantages collapse. Magyar's campaign explicitly targeted low-propensity voters in Budapest suburbs and mid-size cities, treating mobilisation rather than persuasion as the path to supermajority.

A second structural driver: the EU froze Hungary's €16.2 billion SAFE rearmament allocation in March 2026 , removing the material benefit Fidesz's EU membership delivered to its own base. An electorate that supported Orbán's Brussels confrontations while EU funds kept flowing had a different incentive calculus once the funds stopped.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Hungary's veto on the €90 billion EU Ukraine loan lapses once Magyar's government is confirmed, triggering a Council vote expected in late May.

    Short term · 0.85
  • Risk

    Constitutional Court challenges from Fidesz-aligned judges could delay or constrain Magyar's institutional reforms, stretching the dismantling of Orbán's legal architecture beyond the current parliamentary term.

    Medium term · 0.72
  • Consequence

    Hungary's €16.2 billion SAFE allocation, frozen since March, can be released once the Commission is satisfied that rule-of-law conditions are being addressed.

    Short term · 0.79
  • Precedent

    The result demonstrates that high-turnout mobilisation campaigns can overcome Fidesz-style gerrymandering, providing a template for other illiberal-entrenched EU governments facing opposition challenges.

    Long term · 0.68
First Reported In

Update #13 · Treasury kills the Russian crude waiver

Hungarian National Election Office (NVI) via Wikipedia aggregation· 16 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
Different Perspectives
India (BRICS chair / S. Jaishankar)
India (BRICS chair / S. Jaishankar)
India's BRICS chair draft communique frames the Iran conflict as a matter of 'safe, unimpeded maritime flows', a formula explicitly neutral on Iran's 'no obstacles' claim and short of endorsing IRGC maritime doctrine. Delhi has maintained separate tracks: a demarche on Iranian tanker firings at Indian-crewed vessels, silence on OFAC designations naming Indian firms.
International Energy Agency
International Energy Agency
The IEA's May 2026 Oil Market Report quantified the closure at 14.4 million barrels per day shut in, more than one billion barrels of cumulative supply loss, and a 246-million-barrel inventory draw in eight weeks, five times the monthly rate of the 2022 SPR release. The IEA projects a deficit through Q4 2026 even if Hormuz reopens in June.
Pakistan (mediating channel)
Pakistan (mediating channel)
Pakistan's intermediary channel between Washington and Tehran remains active despite Trump's 'totally unacceptable' rebuff of Iran's 10-point MOU reply on 11 May. Islamabad carries the only direct US-Iran track and the only channel with both civilian and military buy-in on the Iranian side, but has not convened a second Islamabad round.
Mojtaba Khamenei / IRIB
Mojtaba Khamenei / IRIB
Iran's state broadcaster reported on 14 May that the Supreme Leader has issued 'new and decisive directives' for military operations, the first such signal since the war began. Mojtaba has not appeared publicly since 28 February; the directives are paper instruments, not verbal statements.
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Beijing's official summit readout mentioned 'the Middle East situation' alongside the Ukraine crisis and the Korean Peninsula, without naming Iran or specifying any Iranian commitment. Chinese state media has not published the three red lines Trump described.
White House / Trump administration
White House / Trump administration
Trump told Fox News from Beijing that Xi had committed to three Iran red lines: no nuclear weapon, an open Hormuz, no military equipment supplied to Tehran. He described the summit as 'a big statement'. The White House issued its own readout confirming those commitments; the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs readout did not.