Hungary Bars Orbán From Returning As Prime Minister, Former Leader Condemns Move
by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Chief International Correspondent
BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – Hungary’s parliament approved a constitutional amendment Monday barring former Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán from ever returning as head of government after serving more than eight years in office, a move the longtime leader swiftly condemned as politically motivated.
Lawmakers approved the measure by a vote of 135 to 50, with six abstentions, providing the required two-thirds majority needed to amend the constitution.
The amendment stipulates that anyone who has served eight years as prime minister can no longer be elected to the office again.
As Orbán served about two decades as prime minister across separate terms, including 16 consecutive years from 2010 until his election defeat in 2026, the change effectively prevents him from seeking the post in the future.
The vote marked one of the most consequential constitutional changes since Orbán’s Fidesz party lost power to Prime Minister Péter Magyar’s center-right government following April’s election.
CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES
Parliament also approved provisions allowing the state to reclaim property, holdings and founding rights from public-interest asset management foundations, known in Hungary as KEKVA foundations, which received substantial public resources and state-backed wealth during Orbán’s years in office.
The amendment additionally abolishes Hungary’s Sovereignty Protection Office, a controversial body established under Orbán’s government that critics said was used to investigate journalists, civil society organizations and political opponents.
Government supporters said the changes are designed to increase transparency and restore public control over assets they argue were transferred into foundations during the previous administration.
Opposition lawmakers and Orbán allies denounced the measures as politically motivated.
Speaking in a post-vote interview, Orbán said the amendment was aimed directly at him.
ORBÁN RESPONDS
“It concerns me personally, but it is about much more than me,” Orbán said.
“It is amusing that everyone in Hungary can participate in public life except me.”
Orbán argued that voters, rather than politicians, should decide who governs the country.
“These kinds of measures never work. In the end, the people decide,” he added.
The former premier also reflected on Fidesz’s election defeat, saying his party had failed to keep pace with digital campaigning and social media trends.
ELECTION DEFEAT
“We could not keep up with the digital pace,” Orbán acknowledged.
He claimed that Magyar’s Tisza movement performed particularly strongly among younger voters and users of platforms such as TikTok and Facebook.
Despite the electoral setback, Orbán insisted he would remain a member of Fidesz for life and suggested the party still had a deep pool of political talent.
Supporters of the amendment say it prevents the concentration of political power in a single leader and helps dismantle structures established during Orbán’s lengthy tenure in office.
Critics, however, argue that barring a former prime minister from returning to office creates a troubling precedent and limits voters’ choices.
POLITICAL FALLOUT
The constitutional changes are expected to face legal and political scrutiny in the months ahead and are likely to deepen tensions between the new government and Orbán’s supporters.
Yet Orbán indicated he has no intention of leaving public life, insisting that ultimately it is voters, not constitutional restrictions, who should determine the country’s political future.
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