Péter
Magyar’s revolt: The insider challenging Hungary’s Viktor Orbán
Even
among his supporters, the opposition leader is a polarizing figure.
By MAX
GRIERA
in
BUDAPEST
https://www.politico.eu/article/peter-magyars-revolt-the-insider-challenging-hungarys-viktor-orban/
April 8,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Max
Griera
Few
outside Hungary’s tight political circles had heard of Péter Magyar — until he
unleashed a blistering critique of the government, complete with a secret audio
recording of his wife, then Justice Minister Judit Varga.
The 2023
recording — made without Varga’s knowledge — captured her describing alleged
government interference in a corruption case. It helped fuel an explosive
scandal that propelled Magyar from a mid-level civil servant into a political
force, setting him up to mount the most serious challenge yet to Hungarian
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s 16-year grip on power.
As Magyar
rides a commanding lead in the polls ahead of the April 12 parliamentary
election, he has galvanized disillusioned voters across the political spectrum,
turning his upstart Tisza movement into a vehicle for those seeking to end
Orbán’s rule.
A Tisza
victory would not only break Fidesz’s 16-year hold on power, but could also
reshape Hungary’s role in Europe — easing Budapest’s clashes with Brussels over
the rule of law, reducing its alignment with Moscow and restoring the country
as a more predictable partner inside the EU and NATO.
Yet even
among those backing his bid to topple a regime he calls corrupt and
authoritarian, Magyar remains a deeply polarizing figure, according to
interviews with more than 15 of the opposition leader’s allies, rivals,
supporters and critics.
While he
has drawn support across the political spectrum by promising to tackle
corruption and restore democratic norms, his abrasive style and past inside the
Fidesz system — including positions aligned with Orbán on migration and Ukraine
— have left parts of the opposition uneasy.
Péter
Márki-Zay, the opposition’s 2022 candidate, called him “arrogant,”
“self-centered” and “mean” — before adding that such traits may be exactly
what’s needed to withstand the pressure from Orbán’s machine.
“We are
not going to marry him,” Márki-Zay said. “It’s just, you know, we need somebody
to put Orbán behind us.”
Family
affair
Magyar
grew up listening to discussions about Hungarian politics at the dinner table.
His father was a lawyer and his mother was a senior Supreme Court official. His
extended family included Ferenc Mádl, who served as president from 2000 to
2005, and his grandfather, Pál Eross, a television commentator dispensing legal
advice from screens across the country.
From an
early age he was immersed in the country’s post-communist, Christian-democratic
intellectual establishment, a background that shaped his ambition for public
life, said Miklós Sükösd, a political scientist and media researcher at the
University of Copenhagen who has written about Magyar’s political rise.
As he
matured, Magyar joined Orbán’s ruling Fidesz party and became a well-connected
insider within it, forging close ties with senior figures including Gergely
Gulyás during their student years in Germany. Gulyás is now the prime
minister’s chief of staff.
“We lived
in Hamburg together … so we had a very strong connection,” Magyar told POLITICO
in a 2024 interview. He did not respond to a request for an interview for this
article in time for publication.
Péter
Magyar speaks during a rally of the Tisza Party in Budapest on 15 Mar, 2026. |
Balint Szentgallay/NurPhoto via Getty Images
He met
Varga in 2005 at a party organized by Gulyás. They married a year later.
As Varga
rose through the ranks of Fidesz — from a European Parliament lawmaker’s
assistant to justice minister in 2019 — Magyar remained on the periphery, first
as a stay-at-home father in Brussels and later in mid-level roles in Hungary’s
EU representation and other state institutions.
Magyar
repeatedly sought higher positions in the government without success. “The
ministers always said no, because he was too ambitious and independent,” said
Sükösd. “So his ambition was put down, and it boiled.”
The
imbalance bred frustration, Sükösd added. “He was somewhat resentful for many
years that Varga was hand-picked.”
During
the 2024 interview, Magyar offered a glimpse of how he viewed the relationship.
“You were
married to Miss Varga, and that’s what kick-started the whole process,” the
interviewer began, only to be interrupted by Magyar: “She was married to me.”
The
couple divorced in March 2023, in what Magyar has described as a break partly
driven by political differences. Varga has accused him of physical and verbal
abuse, including locking her in a room. Magyar dismisses her claims as
“propaganda” orchestrated by Orbán’s entourage. A court has not issued a ruling
on the matter.
Pardon
scandal
Magyar
had long been seen within the party as sharp-tongued. During his time at the EU
representation he earned a reputation for challenging visitors from Budapest.
“He has a
very stubborn character,” said one person who used to work with Magyar,
comparing the opposition leader to his former boss at the Hungarian EU
representation, Oliver Várhelyi, who reportedly screamed and swore at staffers.
As his
relations with Varga deteriorated, the criticism blossomed into rupture.
In
January 2023, two months before the divorce, Magyar secretly recorded Varga
describing how government officials had interfered in a corruption case. In a
documentary movie filmed later, he said he had been seeking insurance in case
he and Varga fell out with the regime.
For
months Magyar stayed silent, wary of the impact on their three children. He
went on a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in Spain.
Then came
the opening. In February 2024, a pardon scandal forced Varga and President
Katalin Novák to resign over the granting of clemency to a pedophile’s
accomplice. Varga, until then Fidesz’s lead candidate for the European
Parliament election later that year, declared she was ending her candidacy.
Accusing
Fidesz officials of “hiding behind women’s skirts,” Magyar went public,
denouncing the government in a blistering Facebook post in February 2024.
Magyar’s
credibility came from his profile: a Fidesz insider publicly accusing the
system of corruption.
He
quickly moved from social media to independent outlets, becoming the first
prominent defector from Orbán’s camp to attack the regime from within and
drawing tens of thousands of frustrated voters amid high inflation and a
cost-of-living crisis.
After a
protest in March drew roughly 50,000 people, he began building a team of
business people and public figures to launch a movement.
Dezső
Farkas, an entrepreneur who was among the first invited to join, said the group
saw a rare opening. “That was the first meeting and we decided — let’s start
the party,” he told POLITICO. Within weeks they were preparing to contest the
June European Parliament election.
The birth
of Tisza
At first
Magyar struggled to recruit allies. “Péter couldn’t invite any of his friends,
because everyone was from Fidesz,” Farkas said.
Six
people quit after the initial meeting. “Everyone was so scared” of potential
retaliation, Farkas said. “Some of them had big companies” and feared that
Orbán’s government would come down hard on them, he added.
While
Magyar served as the face of the movement, Farkas coordinated operations behind
the scenes. He described the party as a “startup,” with theater director Mark
Radnai shaping media strategy and actor-influencer Ervin Nagy mobilizing
crowds.
They
quickly built the infrastructure to compete — setting up a donation network and
an IT system to reach supporters and recruiting thousands of volunteers. “We
got 100,000 emails in February-March,” Farkas said, describing an organization
struggling to keep up with surging demand.
To run in
the 2024 European Parliament election, the group took over a small,
little-known party, rapidly building out its digital presence and local
networks. The result was a breakthrough: Tisza won 29.6 percent of the vote,
while Fidesz dropped to 44.82 percent — its lowest total ever.
Magyar’s
supporters see him “as an insider who used to know these people … who was
sitting in the first row of Orban’s system,” said Katalin Cseh, an unaffiliated
member of the Hungarian parliament.
His
appeal, she added, is that he is viewed “as somebody who understands the system
and is capable of beating it.”
Magyar,
meanwhile, doubled down on campaigning. To break through the tight control
Fidesz maintains on much of the country’s media, he began touring the country.
In May 2025 he walked 250 kilometers from Budapest to Oradea in northwest
Romania to win the support of ethnic Hungarian minorities in neighboring
countries, who mostly vote Fidesz.
Meanwhile,
he used Facebook to respond rapidly to events and reach voters directly. The
party set up grassroots networks known as “Tisza Islands” to amplify his
message even within Fidesz strongholds.
“He
[Magyar] has something that’s very rare in politics today,” Tisza’s EU affairs
chief and MP candidate Marton Hajdu told POLITICO. “He speaks the language of
the algorithm, but he builds trust in person. And he can keep up with the speed
of the news cycle without losing strategic clarity.”
Ahead of
the April 12 election, Magyar continues to tour up to six cities a day.
“There’s
no doubt there is a significant social support behind Tisza,” said András
Cser-Palkovics, the mayor of Székesfehérvár in central Hungary and a member of
Fidesz who is considered one of the party’s few independent voices. “I think
that this match is going to be a very tight one.”
‘Difficult’
personality
But as
Tisza has grown, so too have the questions about the man at its center.
Farkas,
one of the party’s founders, quit after the 2024 European election as the early
“startup” ethos gave way to internal jockeying for power. He briefly returned,
only to leave again, describing the internal culture as increasingly “toxic”
and reminiscent of the Fidesz system Magyar once served.
“The
culture inside the party got something similar — loyalty-based, not
performance-based,” Farkas told POLITICO.
Magyar
runs Tisza from the top down. In the 2024 interview with POLITICO he described
his party as a “one-man show.” He is the only party member permitted to give
interviews, although a select few are allowed to provide brief comments to the
media. Tisza’s press team asked journalists not to conduct interviews with
attendees at a March 15 protest, and volunteers who spoke to POLITICO said they
had been asked not to by their superiors.
Supporters
argue the discipline is necessary: A tightly controlled message, they say, is
the only way to avoid giving pro-government media ammunition and to keep the
party focused on its singular goal of removing Orbán. Observers also praise
Magyar’s sharp rhetoric, his seemingly limitless energy on the campaign trail,
and his uncanny ability to preempt Orban’s attacks.
“There
have been no real scandals that burned on him,” said Péter Krekó, director at
independent political consultancy Political Capital. “Maybe it’s because he has
warned his voter base in advance all the time.”
Magyar
has also tried to improve his credibility by surrounding himself with top
business executives and professionals, casting himself as a competent
alternative to Fidesz’ political class.
And yet
he has been betrayed by his own impulsive streak, from public outbursts at
journalists to reports of an aggressive confrontation at a nightclub. He leans
into the image, styling himself as a tough, masculine leader, posing for
example in a Facebook post wearing a sweatshirt emblazoned with the phrase “The
Man.”
It’s part
of a personality he has folded into his brand as a fighter ready to take on
Orbán. Asked in a documentary how he
would describe himself, Magyar replied: “A difficult one,” adding that he is
“trying” to improve.
For his
many supporters, those flaws are beside the point. Magyar has come to represent
something larger than himself: the first plausible chance in years to remove
Orbán from power.
“We are
not voting for Tisza, we are voting against Fidesz,” said Timea Szabó, a member
of the Hungarian parliament from the Green Party who stepped down to clear the
way for a Tisza candidate. “That’s the whole point. Hungarians would vote for a
goat at this point if it was running against Orbán.”
Péter
Márki-Zay, the 2022 united opposition leader who failed at toppling Orbán and
who is also a conservative, said Magyar will have to prove he can deliver if
he’s to maintain his support should he win the election.
“There is
so much pressure behind him,” he said. “But these waves are also ready to crush
him if he doesn’t fulfil his promises,” which include putting Orbán behind bars
and restoring democracy and the rule of law.
“If he
does not do that, we will definitely not tolerate him anymore,” he said.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário