Hungarian President Tamás Sulyok met all three party leaders in Budapest on 15 April and confirmed he will propose Péter Magyar as prime minister when the new legislature convenes. Magyar is targeting 5 May for government formation. The Hungarian constitution requires the inaugural session by 12 May.
That seven-day window between preferred date and legal deadline is the nearest feasible point at which Hungary can vote in the Council to withdraw its veto on the EU loan for Kyiv referenced in event 1. European Commission officials have said funds could flow "within a few days" once the veto lifts , but the Council vote has to be re-staged after Hungary formally changes its position. Analysts place first disbursement in June at the earliest.
The consultation was procedural rather than contested. Orbán's election-night concession on 12 April removed the confrontation most observers expected. Sulyok's role here is narrow: a Hungarian president has no power to refuse a PM nomination from a party holding a two-thirds majority. The interesting variable is Magyar's cabinet composition, which will show whether the Tisza majority delivers EU-friendly ministerial picks or preserves continuity with some of the Orbán-era administrative apparatus.
