Focus on the BIG picture.
Wednesday, Jul 15, 2026

Hungary's "Puppet" President to Be Ousted, Orbán Fumes: "Democracy Is Dead"

Hungary's new prime minister, Péter Magyar, has secured a constitutional amendment intended to remove President Tamás Sulyok immediately. Viktor Orbán, whom Magyar defeated after 16 years in power, says the move is unlawful and has called for resistance.
Hungary's parliament approved a constitutional amendment on Monday intended to remove President Tamás Sulyok from office immediately, fulfilling part of new Prime Minister Péter Magyar's pledge to dismantle what he says was the authoritarian governing structure built by former prime minister Viktor Orbán and clear state institutions of Orbán loyalists, whom Magyar calls his predecessor's “puppets.”

Magyar won a historic general-election victory in April, unseating Orbán after 16 consecutive years as prime minister.

Orbán was accused of turning Hungary into an undemocratic state during his time in office by subordinating the media and judiciary to his will and severely restricting the opposition.

A former member of Orbán's party, Magyar not only defeated him but secured a parliamentary majority of more than two-thirds.

That majority allows him and his allies to amend the constitution and reverse measures taken by Orbán that they describe as anti-democratic.

They have already approved an amendment barring anyone from serving as Hungary's prime minister for more than eight years in total.

The new amendment stipulates that Sulyok's term, after his appointment by the Orbán-era parliament in 2024, will end immediately because of what it calls a “serious loss of public confidence” in him.

Parliament would then appoint a new president to serve for no more than five years, or until a new constitution enters into force.

Magyar has said he intends this autumn to launch a “huge project,” involving the Hungarian people, to draft an entirely new constitution.

The amendment followed Sulyok's refusal in recent months to resign despite Magyar's calls for him to do so.

Magyar portrayed his sweeping election victory as public backing for a “change of regime” and a mandate to remove Orbán loyalists from the corridors of power.

Sulyok, a former judge on Hungary's Constitutional Court, maintains that he is not a political figure and has refused to leave office.

The presidency is largely ceremonial, but he can ask lawmakers to reconsider legislation or refer it to the Constitutional Court, powers that could obstruct or at least delay the sweeping reforms Magyar has promised.

After Monday's vote, Magyar said his government had begun the “transformation” it pledged to carry out in the legal system created under Orbán. “With this vote, we brought an era to an end,” he said.

“We asked for, and received, an absolutely clear mandate from the Hungarian people to do so.”

In an ironic turn, the amendment was then sent to Sulyok for signature.

He said he had sought advice from the Venice Commission, a legal panel of the Council of Europe, an international European body responsible for protecting human rights, on the amendment that would remove him.

Magyar said that if Sulyok refused to sign it, parliament would begin formal impeachment proceedings against him.

The amendment, which includes further reforms such as setting a retirement age of 70 for judges and limiting members of parliament to 12 years in office, passed by 139 votes to nine in the 199-seat legislature.

Members of Magyar's governing Tisza party applauded at the end of the vote, while Orbán's Fidesz party boycotted it.

Fidesz says the constitutional changes are unprecedented and accuses Magyar of acting in an authoritarian manner against his political opponents.

About 3,000 people attended a pro-Sulyok demonstration last week.

Orbán did not attend, but he defended the president on Monday and said his removal would be illegal.

Orbán, who is currently in the United States to watch the World Cup final matches, posted an image of Magyar against a dark background and declared the death of Hungarian democracy with the caption: “Democratic Hungary, 1990-2026.”

In another post, Orbán wrote: “Today they are settling accounts with the president of the republic, but tomorrow they can do it to anyone.

Tyranny does not tolerate criticism and does not tolerate oversight.

The government wants tools through which it can abolish any person's office and take away any person's business.

We will never recognize the violent methods of an autocratic regime as lawful or legitimate.

A new president placed in office illegally cannot be legitimate, and therefore his decisions will have no legal force either.

If the president is removed by force, Hungary has the right to resist.

And we will do so.”

Magyar's political and social revolution extends beyond constitutional change.

Last week, he appointed new management to the state television and radio networks, which had for years been accused of acting as mouthpieces for Orbán, and broadcasts were temporarily suspended.

A message on the main state television channel, M1, said transmissions were being suspended until the government completed the necessary restructuring and restored the media's independence and credibility.

“Public broadcasting must not lie,” it said.

“We apologize for having done so for many years nevertheless.

Public broadcasting is now undergoing structural change in order to become independent and credible in the future.

The news service is temporarily suspended.

Stay with us.”

Magyar won the election even though state media aligned with Orbán had barred him entirely from appearing in their studios during the campaign.

Only a day after his victory was he allowed to appear on the state Kossuth radio station and the public M1 television channel, where he engaged in heated live confrontations with interviewers.

He accused them of serving Orbán's agenda for years, operating as a propaganda tool and covering his party in a biased manner.

In his M1 interview, Magyar said he was not seeking personal revenge, although he and his family had been vilified “morning, noon and night.” He later described the interview as “the death throes of a factory of lies.”
Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
Hungary's "Puppet" President to Be Ousted, Orbán Fumes: "Democracy Is Dead"
Forget Tinder: The Surprising Platform Where People Find Love
Harvard Astrophysicist to Lead U.S. Scientific Advisory on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena
On the Island That Did Not Yield to Trump, There Is No Electricity, and 10 Million Live in Darkness
Google updates Image Search for 25th anniversary with expanded AI capabilities
Emergency Sirens Activated Across Bahrain as Interior Ministry Issues Shelter Directives
SpaceX Employees Thought They Were Millionaires—Then Reality Hit
International Olympic Committee Receives Complaint Over FIFA President's Alleged Political Interference
Singapore Court Orders Bloomberg to Pay Defamation Damages to Government Ministers
IBM Shares Drop More Than Twenty Percent After Artificial Intelligence Spending Shift Hits Outlook
United States Inflation Falls More Than Expected as Federal Reserve Weighs Next Policy Moves
Iran-Linked Cyber Campaign Tracked United States Military Personnel Through Telecom Networks
United States Supreme Court Tariff Ruling Forces More Than Eighty Billion Dollars in Government Refunds
United States and Iran Exchange Direct Military Strikes as Strait of Hormuz Tensions Shake Energy Markets
Intel Commits Five Billion Euros to Expand Artificial Intelligence Chip Production in Ireland
China Posts Record Trade Surplus With European Union on Strong Artificial Intelligence Exports
United States and China Clash Over Alleged Inspections of Panama-Flagged Ships
Ukraine Launches Drone Strikes on Russian Oil Refineries
Ukraine Accuses Russia of Executing Hundreds of Prisoners of War
Global Oil Prices Jump as Strait of Hormuz Closure Weighs on Financial Markets
United States Resumes Military Operations Against Iran as Ceasefire Collapses
United States Assumes Direct Financial Oversight of Venezuela After Capture of Nicolás Maduro
European Union Secures Nine Hundred Million Euros for Gaza Reconstruction
Nine European Nations and Ukraine Form Joint Anti-Ballistic Missile Defense Coalition
Japan Establishes First Centralized Intelligence Agency Since World War Two
Massive Flooding Forces More Than One Million People to Evacuate in Northern China
Global Stock Markets Slide as Artificial Intelligence and Semiconductor Shares Lead Sell-Off
United States and Iran Escalate Military Conflict as Strait of Hormuz Faces Blockade
A Million Dollars Above the Asking Price: Who Is Driving Silicon Valley's Housing Market Wild?
Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa Opens Newly Elected Parliament to Advance Political Transition
United States Senator Lindsey Graham Dies at Seventy-One
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy Replaces Prime Minister in Wider Government Reshuffle
China Conducts Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile Test into the Pacific Ocean
Global Markets Retreat as Middle East Conflict Drives Oil Prices Higher and Bond Yields Up
United States and Iran Exchange Direct Military Strikes as Fighting Escalates Around the Strait of Hormuz
World Cup Visitors Turn American Big-Box Stores Into Souvenir Stops
Netflix Weighs Always-On Channels, Bundles and Short-Form Video
Passenger Is Pulled Partly Outside Ryanair Jet After Window Fails Mid-Flight
Evaxion Reports Artificial Intelligence-Designed Cytomegalovirus Vaccine Breakthrough
Apollo Global Management Makes 7.7 Billion Dollar Takeover Bid for EasyJet
Apple Sues OpenAI Over Alleged Artificial Intelligence Trade Secret Theft
Typhoon Bavi Forces Two Million Evacuations Across Eastern China
United States Senator Lindsey Graham Dies at Age 71
United States Authorizes Domestic Production of Patriot Missiles in Ukraine
United States and Iran Exchange Direct Military Strikes After Tehran Declares Strait of Hormuz Closed
North Korea Condemns NATO Summit and Accuses Alliance of Expanding Confrontation Into Asia-Pacific
SpaceX Joins Nasdaq-100 Following Record Initial Public Offering
Apple Sues OpenAI in Trade Secret Dispute Over Artificial Intelligence Technology
European Union Drafts Financial Backstop to Shield Supply Chains From Potential Chinese Retaliation
Russia and Ukraine Intensify Long-Range Strikes as Fighting Expands Beyond the Front Line
×