Orbán is
out. Who’s the EU’s next disruptor-in-chief?
The
obstructionist Hungarian leader is leaving after 16 years at the Council table
— but Brussels shouldn’t expect smooth sailing.
April 15,
2026 4:00 am CET
By
Sebastian Starcevic
https://www.politico.eu/article/hungary-viktor-orban-out-who-eu-next-disruptor-in-chief/
Viktor
Orbán is out — and his crown as the EU’s chief disruptor is suddenly up for
grabs.
The
handover comes at a delicate moment, with the bloc leaning on unity to push
through sanctions, budgets and other decisions that still require unanimity.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen wasted no time this week
after Orbán’s defeat to suggest changes to the EU’s voting rules to avoid
future bottlenecks.
For years
the pugnacious Hungarian prime minister has wielded his veto to stall key
initiatives, most notably on EU support for Ukraine. After his crushing loss in
Sunday’s election he will soon be replaced by Péter Magyar, a center-right
figure who has signaled a willingness to work more closely with Brussels.
Some hope
Magyar’s victory will make consensus easier to reach. “My impression is that
the political business model of being a systemic and structural disrupter broke
down with [Orban’s party] Fidesz’s severe election defeat,” said an EU
diplomat, granted anonymity to speak frankly like others in this article.
But
Orbán’s exit doesn’t mean von der Leyen — or Kyiv — can breathe easy. The
European Council, where all 27 leaders meet to take decisions, still includes a
handful of Orbán allies and a few potential new spoilers.
Here are
the five leaders most likely to take up Orbán’s mantle as the bloc’s next bête
noire.
The
Sidekick: Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico
Slovakia’s
premier was often Orbán’s faithful partner-in-veto, joining his fellow
pro-Russia leader in blocking sanctions on Moscow and demanding a carveout from
the EU’s €90 billion loan for Ukraine. With Orbán out, Fico stands alone as the
Kremlin’s closest — and perhaps last — friend in the EU.
“I am
interested in being a constructive player in the European Union, but not at the
expense of the Slovak Republic,” Fico declared last summer.
Fico
warned last month that he might veto the €90 billion tranche of funds for Kyiv
in Orbán’s stead if the Hungarian were to lose the election. Budapest has for
months blocked disbursement of the funds that had been agreed to at a summit in
December, over a dispute with Kyiv about a broken pipeline transporting Russian
oil to Central Europe. Magyar signaled on Monday that he would not stand in the
EU’s way.
With the
pipeline still not operational — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said
it wouldn’t be repaired until the end of April — the question now is whether
Fico will make good on his threat to take the baton from Orbán and block the
funds, or fall in line with the EU. The Slovak leader has previously always
backed down on sanctions and joined EU joint statements in support of Ukraine.
“I think
they [Fico and the other leaders] will be acutely aware of the risks and
consequences of choosing a somewhat similar path as him [Orbán],” the EU
diplomat quoted above said.
The
Populist Billionaire: Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš
Czechia’s
prime minister, a 71-year-old billionaire dubbed the “Czech Trump” who has
governed in coalition with the far right since December, has already shown some
Orbán-style leanings. Babiš was the only leader, along with Orbán and Fico, to
demand a carveout from the EU’s €90 billion loan for Ukraine. He has also
called for support to Kyiv to be scaled back, although he ultimately stopped
short of scrapping Czechia’s ammunition initiative in support of Ukraine’s
defense.
Babiš,
whose coalition includes the anti-green Motorists party, also has the EU’s
climate policies firmly in his sights. He has railed against the bloc’s carbon
permits scheme, arguing it is killing Czech industry.
Rather
than obstructing everything, right-wingers in the Council are expected to be
“difficult on certain items,” especially when “compared to mainstream thinking
among other European leaders,” the EU diplomat said.
The
Tightrope Walker: Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni
The
Italian leader has walked a precarious tightrope of pragmatism with Brussels
since she came to power over three years ago, balancing her right-wing,
nationalist politics with a pro-EU stance in international affairs. By allying
with other leaders such Denmark’s Mette Frederiksen, Meloni sought to toughen
the EU’s migration rules through consensus rather than obstructionism.
One EU
diplomat said Meloni had proven to be a “totally different breed” of politician
from Orbán. But another warned she came from the same political family as the
Hungarian and shouldn’t be counted out.
“At the
last European Council, the only person to have agreed with Orbán was Meloni,”
the second EU diplomat said, referring to the Italian leader’s confession to
other leaders that she understood Orbán’s position on the Ukraine loan at the
March summit. “You can see there is an ideological link between the two of
them.”
The
Comeback Populist: Slovenia’s Janez Janša
Slovenia’s
former multi-term prime minister, a right-wing populist and self-described
Trump admirer with a penchant for picking fights with journalists, came in
second place by just one seat in last month’s dramatic espionage-marred
election. With negotiations ongoing it remains unclear whether Janša or
incumbent PM Robert Golob will be able to assemble a governing coalition.
Janša,
sometimes dubbed a “mini-Trump,” would add to a growing populist club in the EU
if he returns to power. On Ukraine, however, there is a notable difference
between Janša and Orbán or even Fico: Despite being allied with the Hungarian
on other issues, Janša has championed Ukraine’s EU membership and visited Kyiv
in 2022 in the early days of Russia’s full-scale invasion to show support.
The
Bulgarian Wild Card: Rumen Radev
Bulgaria’s
former president resigned in January to launch a new party and run in Sunday’s
parliamentary elections. And he’s on track to win, according to POLITICO’s Poll
of Polls, in a potential breakthrough after years of political paralysis in
Sofia.
That
might be a problem for Ukraine and its European allies. In 2025 Radev said
Ukraine is “doomed” in its war against Russia and argued that increasing EU
military aid, or “pouring more weapons” into Kyiv, wasn’t the answer. He also
blamed European leaders for encouraging Kyiv’s counteroffensive, saying it had
led to “hundreds of thousands of victims” in Ukraine.
Radev’s
Kremlin sympathies earned him a salty rebuke from Zelenskyy during a televised
clash between the two leaders in 2023 at the presidential palace in Sofia. “You
would say: Putin, please grab Bulgarian territory?” Zelenskyy demanded. A
flustered Radev struggled to answer.

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