Pro-Government Media Group Acquires Hungary’s Leading Tabloid Ahead of Elections Amid Emergency Rule (Worthy News Investigation)


by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief reporting from Budapest, Hungary

BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – A media company closely tied to Hungary’s powerful right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has purchased the country’s most widely-read daily tabloid, marking another major consolidation of media influence less than six months before next year’s national elections.

Swiss publisher Ringier Hungary confirmed the sale of its Hungarian portfolio — including the popular tabloid Blikk and Glamour magazine — to the pro-government Indamedia Network.

Indamedia’s co-owner Gábor Ziegler said the purchase, agreed last week, added “a well-performing media company with strong market positions and successful brands that play a defining role in the Hungarian media landscape.”

The transaction comes as Orbán faces a serious challenge from the new TISZA Party led by Péter Magyar, who has accused the government of running a “propaganda factory.” The timing of the sale, less than six months before the election, has raised alarm among press-freedom advocates.

SHOCK AND CONCERN IN THE NEWSROOM

Staff at Blikk said they were stunned by the takeover.

“I almost had a heart attack when I heard the announcement,” one reporter told Hungarian media. “For me, this is morally unacceptable.”

Outgoing editor-in-chief Iván Zsolt Nagy confirmed he and another senior manager were leaving by mutual agreement with the new owners after seven months of efforts to make Blikk “more public-oriented, covering politics, economics, and culture.”

Media-watchdog director Ágnes Urbán of Mérték Media Monitor warned that Blikk, which reaches about three million online readers monthly, is “by far the most-read daily newspaper in Hungary.”

She said its readership is “very important to Fidesz” because “if propaganda appears in such widely read and popular media, it will have an impact on the public.”

SLOW GOVERNMENT RESPONSE

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, whom critics view as increasingly authoritarian, declined to comment directly on the sale but has defended Hungary’s media system, saying in a 2024 interview with Kossuth Rádió that “pluralism exists — the left also has its outlets; what matters is competition, not foreign interference.”

However, pro-government outlets such as Magyar Nemzet and Origo described the acquisition as a “natural step toward strengthening Hungarian ownership in media,” echoing Orbán’s long-standing policy of promoting what he calls “national media sovereignty.”

A senior Fidesz lawmaker told news site HVG.hu that “foreign media owners often do not understand Hungarian readers” and that “local ownership ensures better representation of national values.”

By contrast, opposition leader Péter Magyar said the deal represented “another attempt by Orbán to cement his control over Hungary’s media outlets.”

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BROADER IMPACT ON MEDIA LANDSCAPE

Over the past 15 years, Orbán’s government has gradually built a vast pro-government media empire. Since 2018, the Central European Press and Media Foundation (KESMA) has grouped more than 470 outlets — regional papers, television channels, and online portals — into a single entity loyal to the ruling party.

Independent watchdogs such as Mérték Media Monitor estimate that roughly 70–80 percent of Hungary’s media outlets are now owned or controlled by entities close to Orbán’s government. Human Rights Watch warns this concentration “undermines genuine media pluralism and impedes access to independent information.”

Hungary ranks 67th of 180 countries in the 2024 Reporters Without Borders World Press Freedom Index, the third-lowest position in the European Union. Research also shows that up to 90 percent of state advertising flows to pro-government outlets, giving them an overwhelming market advantage.

At the same time, only 23 percent of Hungarians say they trust “most news most of the time,” among the lowest levels in Europe.

EMERGENCY RULE AND ELECTION CLIMATE

The media takeover comes shortly after the Hungarian Parliament voted in October 2025 to extend the state of emergency by 180 days, until May 14, 2026.

Under the emergency system, which critics say could further impact media freedom, the government can suspend fundamental rights — including the right to protest — though officials insist the arrangement will not affect next year’s vote.

The decision means it is highly likely that Hungary’s next parliamentary elections will be held under emergency conditions, potentially giving Orbán greater leeway to consolidate power. Orbán has said he expects the next election to take place in April 2026, with an official date to be announced early next year.

The prime minister has governed under some form of emergency rule since the COVID-19 pandemic began in 2020. Following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, the government cited the war in Hungary’s eastern neighbor as justification for maintaining the system.

RULE OF LAW RANKING

For the first time since taking power in 2010, Orbán’s Fidesz party faces a serious challenge to its dominance.

The opposition TISZA Party, led by Péter Magyar, has a double-digit lead in some polls amid corruption scandals and a worsening cost-of-living crisis.

Additionally, Hungary has been ranked the lowest in the European Union for the seventh consecutive year in the World Justice Project’s 2024 Rule of Law Index, which assesses 142 countries worldwide on judicial independence, corruption controls, and fundamental rights.

The report placed Hungary 73rd globally and 31st among 31 EU and EFTA (European Free Trade Association) countries — a grouping that includes Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland — highlighting ongoing concerns about the erosion of checks and balances and the weakening of independent institutions.

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