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.
