sexta-feira, 20 de março de 2026
Viktor Orbán's ability to stay in power after the upcoming parliamentary elections on April 12, 2026, is currently a matter of intense debate and high uncertainty. While he has maintained a dominant grip on Hungarian politics since 2010, he now faces his most significant electoral challenge to date from Péter Magyar and the Tisza Party.
Will
Orban be able to stay in Power after the elections?
Viktor
Orbán's ability to stay in power after the upcoming parliamentary elections on
April 12, 2026, is currently a matter of intense debate and high uncertainty.
While he has maintained a dominant grip on Hungarian politics since 2010, he
now faces his most significant electoral challenge to date from Péter Magyar
and the Tisza Party.
The
outcome depends on several critical factors:
1.
Polling and Public Sentiment
Opposition
Lead: Most recent independent polls show the Tisza Party leading Orbán’s Fidesz
party. For instance, a March 2026 poll by the 21 Research Centre placed Tisza
at 53% among decided voters compared to 39% for Fidesz.
Eroding
Support: Voters have expressed growing fatigue over government corruption, high
inflation, and a lagging economy.
Pro-Government
Perspective: Government-aligned polls, such as those from the Nézőpont
Institute, continue to project a Fidesz victory, citing the party's 15-year
track record and perceived stability.
2. The
Electoral System Advantage
Structural
Bias: Hungary's mixed electoral system is widely considered to favor the
incumbent. Fidesz's 2010 redesign of constituency boundaries (often called
gerrymandering) means the opposition likely needs a national lead of at least
3–5 percentage points to secure a parliamentary majority.
Winner-Take-All:
106 of the 199 seats are decided in single-member districts by a
"first-past-the-post" system, which can magnify even a small lead
into a commanding seat majority.
3.
Strategic Moves to Retain Control
Post-Election
Planning: There is speculation and some reported evidence that Orbán is
preparing for a potential loss by transferring loyalists to long-term
institutional roles. For example, the chief prosecutor was recently moved to
the Constitutional Court for a 12-year term.
Presidential
Shift: Reports suggest Orbán may attempt to strengthen the powers of the
presidency (currently a ceremonial role) to maintain influence even if Fidesz
loses its parliamentary majority.
4.
International Endorsements
Orbán has
received high-profile support from figures like Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin,
and Robert Fico.
The
opposition, led by Magyar, is backed by the European People's Party and leaders
like Donald Tusk, promising to restore ties with the EU and unlock billions in
frozen funds.
Helen Thompson from UnHerd suggests that the Trump administration is strategically leveraging the Iran-driven closure of the Strait of Hormuz to cripple China's economy via energy shortages. This "reverse Suez" scenario harms Asian economies heavily dependent on Middle Eastern oil while benefiting the US, a net energy exporter, aiding its dominance in the global AI race.
Thompson reveals a possible strategic plan by the
Trump administration to weaponise energy markets against China, while exploring
how the closure of the Strait of Hormuz serves American interests in the global
AI race, and how a reverse Suez moment is fundamentally redrawing the map of
global power.
Helen
Thompson from UnHerd suggests that the Trump administration is strategically
leveraging the Iran-driven closure of the Strait of Hormuz to cripple China's
economy via energy shortages. This "reverse Suez" scenario harms
Asian economies heavily dependent on Middle Eastern oil while benefiting the
US, a net energy exporter, aiding its dominance in the global AI race.
Key
Aspects of the Strategic Plan:
Weaponising
Energy: By not immediately forcing the Strait open, the U.S. is allowing high
oil prices to strain China's manufacturing sector.
The
"Reverse Suez" Effect: Unlike the 1956 Suez crisis which weakened the
UK, this scenario strengthens the US position while pressuring Asian
manufacturing, forcing China to deal with severe energy supply disruption.
Strait of
Hormuz Closure: The blockade of this crucial, 20% of global oil-carrying
waterway acts as a massive "energy shock" that disproportionately
impacts Chinese economic stability and global supply chains.
Strategic
Advantage in AI: By disrupting China’s manufacturing base and diverting energy
focus, the United States aims to gain a crucial edge in the intense global
competition for AI leadership, as seen on this YouTube video.
Geopolitical
Ramifications:
Targeting
China: Trump's threat to delay trade talks unless Beijing assists in reopening
the strait is designed to force China's hand, placing them in a strategic
dilemma.
Redrawing
Power Dynamics: The crisis acts as a "reverse Suez," wherein the US
leverages its domestic energy self-sufficiency to secure a strategic advantage
over traditional Eurasian manufacturing hubs, fundamentally altering the global
power balance.
Escalation
Trap: The situation is evolving into a high-stakes, direct confrontation with
Iran over the strait, which is severely shaking global markets, notes Project
Syndicate and Deezer.
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