Rightwing
leaders endorse Viktor Orbán in Hungarian election campaign video
Italy’s
Giorgia Meloni and France’s Marine Le Pen among figures showing support for
Hungary’s prime minister
Ashifa
Kassam
Fri 16
Jan 2026 05.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/16/rightwing-leaders-endorse-viktor-orban-video-election
Rightwing
leaders from around the world have come together to endorse Hungary’s Viktor
Orbán, hinting at the symbolism that the country’s elections hold for global
far-right movements even as the populist leader lags in the polls.
A
campaign video published online by Orbán this week includes endorsements from
nearly a dozen leaders including Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and Matteo Salvini,
France’s Marine Le Pen and Germany’s Alice Weidel.
“Europe
needs Viktor Orbán,” Weidel, a co-leader of the far-right Alternative für
Deutschland (AfD), tells viewers.
Le Pen,
the former leader of France’s far-right National Rally party, piles praise on
the leader who once described Hungary as a “petri dish for illiberalism”.
“Thanks to leaders like Viktor Orbán, the camp of patriots and defenders of
nations and sovereign peoples is achieving ever greater success in Europe,” she
says.
Meloni,
in turn, seeks to highlight the similarities she shares with Orbán: “Together
we stand for a Europe that respects national sovereignty [and] is proud of its
cultural and religious roots.”
The show
of support before the Hungarian elections on 12 April follows a year in which
Orbán, the European Union’s longest-serving leader, made headlines over his
government’s attempt to ban Pride events and clamp down further on independent
media and NGOs.
Orbán,
who has long faced criticism for weakening democratic institutions, eroding
media freedom and undermining the rule of law, is facing an unprecedented
challenge from a former top member of his own party, Péter Magyar.
As
Hungarians grapple with economic stagnation, the rising cost of living and
fraying social services, polls have suggested Orbán and his Fidesz party are
trailing behind Magyar’s opposition Tisza party.
In
response, Fidesz has sought to stress Orbán’s international connections,
casting them as an asset for Hungary amid volatile and turbulent international
conditions, according to Márton Bene, a political analyst at the TK Institute
for Political Science in Budapest. “Something his opponent – as a political
newcomer – simply does not have,” he said.
Magyar’s
campaign, in contrast, has focused on domestic affairs, with pledges to
stimulate the Hungarian economy by tackling corruption and unlocking billions
of euros in frozen EU funds.
The
election result is likely to hinge on how voters see these competing narratives
and “whether they treat international challenges, or domestic governmental
performance, as the election’s primary stake,” Bene said.
The
campaign video includes a handful of references to Russia’s full-scale invasion
of Ukraine. Orbán, the EU leader closest to Vladimir Putin, has repeatedly
blocked efforts by Brussels to present a united front in support of Ukraine,
leading some critics to refer to him as Putin’s Trojan horse in the EU.
The video
shows leaders seemingly lauding these efforts, with Weidel noting that Orbán is
“fighting for peace in Ukraine”, while Salvini says: “If you want peace, vote
for Fidesz.”
Other
leaders featured in the video include Herbert Kickl, the leader of Austria’s
Freedom party (FPÖ); the Czech prime minister, Andrej Babiš; as well as the
presidents of Serbia and Argentina, Aleksandar Vučić and Javier Milei.
Israel’s
prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, also makes an appearance, saying that
“security cannot be taken for granted, it must be won” and describing Orbán as
someone who has the qualities needed to protect his country.
Netanyahu’s
appearance comes despite Israel’s official boycott of two of the far-right
parties represented in the video, Germany’s AfD and Austria’s FPÖ, due to their
antisemitic roots, noted the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
While US
officials are conspicuously absent from the video, Orbán recently published a
December letter in which Donald Trump wished him the “best of luck” in the
election campaign. “You have always stood firm to defend the principles that
make Hungary such a tremendous place – faith, family, and sovereignty,” the
letter read.
Bene said
the video was telling. “For this ideological camp, a potential collapse of the
Orbán regime would be significant primarily in symbolic terms,” he said.
He
pointed to last year’s global political discourse that centred on the advance
of the “illiberal-populist right” in some countries. “One of the prototypes and
early models of this wave – and, due to its perceived stability, a frequent
point of reference – has been Viktor Orbán’s Hungary,” he said.
“Its
downfall would therefore constitute a powerful symbolic counterpoint to this
broader trend: it would become harder to frame the phenomenon as uniform and
global, and the often-cited ‘success story’ underpinning it would be called
into question.”

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