Orban’s special relationship with Putin

by time news


Proximity to Moscow: Vladimir Putin (right), President of Russia, and Viktor Orbán, Prime Minister of Hungary, during a joint press conference after their meeting in the Kremlin in September 2018
Image: dpa

Viktor Orbán has maintained a close relationship with Russian President Putin for years – and has also benefited from this domestically. Could it now cost him the election in Hungary?

Wwill the issue of Ukraine affect the elections in Hungary on April 3? That’s what we asked Peter Marki-Zay, the Hungarian opposition’s lead candidate, when he visited Berlin in February to present his ideas to a German audience. His reply was: “Not very much, I think. Hungarians are not very interested in foreign policy.” Perhaps, he joked, thanks to Orbán’s good behavior, Putin won’t conquer Hungary after all. “But seriously: I don’t think it will have a big impact.” That was one day before the “turning point”: The following night, the attack on Ukraine ordered by Russian President Vladimir Putin began.

Six weeks later, the war is the central election campaign issue in Hungary, and the only question that remains is whether the majority of voters will follow Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s slogans or those of the opposition. Orbán says: war or peace. Marki-Zay says: East or West. One slogan insinuates that the opposition will draw Hungary into the Ukraine war, the other that Orbán wants to make Hungary a vassal of Russia.

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