Audio By Carbonatix
Hungary's outgoing Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has said he will not take up his seat in parliament after his party was defeated in a landslide that ended his 16-year rule.
"I am now needed not in parliament, but in the reorganisation of the patriotic movement," he said in a video statement released on social media on Saturday evening.
Despite his nationalist party Fidesz going from 135 seats to 52 in the 12 April vote, Orbán was re-elected as an MP on its proportional representation list.
Tisza, led by former Fidesz insider Péter Magyar, won more than a two-thirds majority in the 199-seat parliament, paving the way for a reset of both Hungary's domestic policies and its global relationships.
Following a meeting of Fidesz officials, Orbán, 62, said the party's parliamentary bloc would be led from Monday by Gergely Gulyás, who until now has served as the minister overseeing the prime minister's office.
"The mandate I obtained as the lead candidate of the Fidesz-KDNP list is, in fact, a parliamentary mandate of Fidesz. For this reason, I have decided to return it," Orbán said.
About half of Hungary's parliamentary seats are divided among political parties according to their national vote share, while the other half represent individual constituencies.
Orbán has held a seat through one electoral format or the other since 1990, and has led Fidesz throughout that period. He has served as Hungary's prime minister since 2010, becoming the predominant figure in Hungarian politics.
However, voters abandoned him in their droves amid brewing public unhappiness over allegations of corruption and graft while living standards slipped.
Hungary's incoming PM has promised to reverse Orbán-era changes to education and health, tackle corruption, restore the independence of the judiciary and kill off the widely loathed system of patronage known as NER that helped enrich party loyalists and squander state resources.
While Orbán aligned himself with US President Donald Trump and Russia's Vladimir Putin, "Russians go home" was an oft-heard chant of Tisza supporters during the campaign.
Instead of being a stumbling block for the EU and Ukraine, Magyar has pledged to seek more cordial ties with Brussels and Kyiv.
The Tisza leader has urged a swift handover of power, and Hungary's new parliament is due to hold its first session on 9 May.
Orbán's fate as Fidesz leader, meanwhile, will be decided at a party conference in June, he said as he vowed to continue shaping the nationalist movement.
Latest Stories
-
Chief of Staff tears as he apologises to Pentecost Churh over Free Zones CEO’s conduct
3 minutes -
Forgive us, it was just a slip — Chief of Staff appeals for forgiveness from Church of Pentecost
21 minutes -
Businessman RNAQ denies ever assaulting ex-wife, challenges authenticity of viral video
1 hour -
Fire razes Sunyani Magistrate Courts ‘A’ and ‘B’, destroys case records, equipment
1 hour -
Best-performing BECE candidate in Wa East to enjoy full scholarship – MP announces
2 hours -
Dambai: Passengers reject ferry fare increment, threaten to protest on Monday
2 hours -
‘If people cannot think beyond party, they should stop opening their mouths’ — Rev. Prof Mante warns
2 hours -
Asantehene honours Prophet Uche with gold coin at 27th anniversary gala
2 hours -
The Silent Decay of the Last Mile: Can a GH¢3.46bn gamble save Ghana’s grid?
2 hours -
Orbán steps down from Hungarian parliament after landslide defeat
3 hours -
Trump said RFK Jr could run ‘wild’ with health policy. Instead he’s reined him in
3 hours -
Netanyahu orders army to ‘vigorously attack’ Hezbollah in Lebanon
3 hours -
Colombia president says rebels behind highway bombing that killed 14 people
3 hours -
‘We’re not afraid of anybody’- Rev. Prof Mante fumes over attack on clergyman for galamsey comment
3 hours -
The eerie abandoned vehicles in Chernobyl’s ‘dead zone’
3 hours