Serbian authorities found two backpacks containing explosives hundreds of metres from the TurkStream pipeline near the Serbia-Hungary border on 5 April, classifying the incident as sabotage planned by "a foreigner" without naming a state actor. Viktor Orban convened an emergency Defence Council within hours. Hungary's electoral system, with gerrymandered constituencies and state media dominance, already favoured the incumbent. A pipeline security crisis plays directly to Orban's strongest terrain: energy sovereignty and the claim that Fidesz alone can protect Hungary.
The absence of attribution is the politically operative detail. For Orban, the perpetrator's identity is irrelevant to the event's campaign utility. Ukraine denied involvement immediately, but denials circulate in a fragmented media environment. Tisza had led Fidesz by 19 points among decided voters ; whether this incident narrows that margin will be visible only in the final week's polling.
The downstream consequences for Ukraine are material. A Tisza victory is necessary but not sufficient to unblock the EUR 90 billion EU loan. Tisza MEPs voted against the package in the European Parliament. Analysts predicting a Tisza win still place first disbursement in June, weeks after Ukraine's mid-May resource depletion deadline . The TurkStream incident tightens that window further if it shifts even a few percentage points of undecided voters.
