Independent Hungarian pollster Medián published a final pre-election poll on 11 April placing Tisza at 58% against Fidesz at 33%, the widest independent margin of the cycle 1. AtlasIntel had Tisza at 52.1% the same week. The Fidesz-aligned pollster Nézőpont still put Orbán's party ahead at 46% to 40%, the only major survey to do so. Péter Magyar leads Orbán on prime ministerial suitability by 48.7 points.
A Tisza win is necessary but not sufficient to unlock the €90 billion EU loan package for Ukraine that Tisza MEPs themselves voted against in the European Parliament . Magyar has committed to a national referendum on Ukraine's EU accession; neither the referendum nor any change in MEP voting delivers funds on a calendar Kyiv can use. Even an optimistic legislative scenario places first disbursement in June, after Kyiv's interceptor supply crunch bites.
Orbán has run on the premise that "our sons will not die for Ukraine." Putin's Easter ceasefire window closes at midnight on polling day, giving the incumbent an image of Russian restraint no Fidesz campaign flyer can buy. Whether that closes the independent-poll gap is the open question as ballots are cast. Whether any result hands Kyiv a materially different funding calendar is a longer six-week question.
