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Hungary election live: voters head to the polls in contest that could see end of Viktor Orbán’s rule | Hungary

Key events

Hang on: what’s the story and why does it all matter?

Jon Henley

Europe correspondent

Not a regular observer of Hungarian politics? We’ve got you.

The EU’s longest-serving leader, Orbán has since 2010 turned Hungary into what he calls an “illiberal democracy”, declaring himself Europe’s defender of traditional Christian family values against an onslaught of western liberalism and multiculturalism.

Hungary’s prime minister Viktor Orbán arrives for the EU summit at the European Council building in Brussels. Photograph: Geert Vanden Wijngaert/AP

His four successive governments have comprehensively eroded the rule of law in Hungary, packing the courts with judges loyal to him and turning up to 80% of the country’s media in effect into a propaganda machine for himself and his far-right Fidesz party.

He has become the EU’s disruptor-in-chief, battling with Brussels – which has suspended billions of euros in funding – over policies including on justice, migration, LGBTQ+ rights and, more recently, aid for Ukraine, which, along with sanctions against Russia, he has consistently blocked (including the latest €90bn loan).

Orbán is the EU’s most Moscow-friendly leader, continuing to buy Russian oil and gas and to meet Vladimir Putin since Russia’s full-scale invasion. Recent allegations that Budapest shared confidential EU information with the Kremlin have sparked EU outrage.

A person holds a placard depicting Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán and Russia’s president Vladimir Putin as a Matryoshka doll during a free concert in Budapest, Hungary. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters

Orbán has inspired like-minded EU-obstructive leaders such as Slovakia’s Robert Fico and the Czech Republic’s Andrej Babiš, and boosted nationalist challengers such as France’s Marine Le Pen and the Netherlands’ Geert Wilders.

In short, the election will have consequences far beyond Hungary, a country that accounts for just 1.1% of the EU’s GDP and 2% of its population but has, under Orbán, come to play a role on the international stage out of all proportion to its size.

For more Q&As on what it’s all about and who are the key players, check our explainer here:

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