Thousands march in Budapest to support Orban amid election challenges

The gathering, dubbed a “peace march” by organisers, came on Hungary’s October 23 national holiday, a remembrance of a failed anti-Soviet uprising in 1956 that was crushed by the Red Army
Thousands march in Budapest to support Orban amid election challenges

Pro-government demonstrators march during celebrations marking the 69th anniversary of the outbreak of Hungary’s 1956 revolution against communist rule and the Soviet Union, in Budapest, Hungary. Picture: Rudolf Karancsi/AP

Thousands of Hungarians congregated on the streets of Budapest in a show of force on behalf of their leader, Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who six months ahead of parliamentary elections looks set to face the most competitive ballot in his 15 years in power.

The gathering, dubbed a “peace march” by organisers, came on Hungary’s October 23 national holiday, a remembrance of a failed anti-Soviet uprising in 1956 that was crushed by the Red Army.

Marchers shouted slogans backing Mr Orban and his message that Hungary is at risk of becoming directly involved in Russia’s war in Ukraine.

A pro-government demonstrator holds a sign reading ‘Peace’ in Hungarian in Budapest, Hungary (Rudolf Karancsi/AP)

At the front of the march, one large banner read: “We don’t want to die for Ukraine.”

Attendees, waving flags bearing the names of the towns and villages across Hungary from which they came, set off along the Margaret Bridge spanning the Danube, backdropped by Hungary’s towering neo-Gothic parliament.

One marcher, Babett Lugosi, said she believed “national consciousness and Christianity” were in danger, and that Mr Orban was the only politician in Hungary capable of defending the country’s interests against external threats.

“It’s very important that Europe and Hungary preserve their stability, and I am convinced that we are threatened from many directions, and we have to show that were are a sovereign country,” she said.

Mr Orban, considered Russian President Vladimir Putin’s closest partner in the European Union, has consistently argued against Western support for neighbouring Ukraine since Moscow’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

In contrast to nearly every other EU leader, he has maintained warm relations with the Kremlin while taking a combative posture toward Kyiv.

Participants of the peace march organised by the pro-government Civil Unity Forum gather at the Buda side of Margaret Bridge in Budapest, Hungary (Zsolt Czegledi/MTI via AP)

He has argued for an immediate ceasefire in the conflict, though he has not addressed what that might imply for Ukraine’s territorial integrity or European security amid continuing Russian aggression.

Mr Orban on Thursday was set to deliver a speech to his supporters following the march.

Later in the day, supporters of Mr Orban’s main political challenger, Peter Magyar, were expected to gather in central Budapest for their own demonstration — both an anti-government protest and a show of force behind Mr Magyar and his centre-right Tisza party.

The duelling marches were seen as a barometer of which politician had more energy behind his campaign as elections near.

Mr Orban, in power since 2010, is lagging in the polls behind Mr Magyar’s Tisza, and with six months before the ballot, the Hungarian leader has sought to reinvigorate his base.

But the political mood in Hungary in recent months has made that task difficult: Persistent inflation, a stagnating economy and increasingly salient allegations of government corruption have plagued Mr Orban’s government, while the popularity of Mr Magyar’s party has consistently grown.

A pro-government demonstrator holds a sign with drawings of US President Donald Trump and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in Budapest (Rudolf Karancsi/AP)

Mr Magyar, a 44-year-old lawyer and former insider within Mr Orban’s Fidesz party, has focused his campaign on the rural countryside, traditionally a reliable voting bloc for Fidesz.

He recently ended an 80-day tour of the country where he held scores of town hall-style forums, giving speeches and taking questions from attendees.

On Thursday, scores of buses that were used to transport participants from around Hungary and neighbouring countries were parked near the pro-government march route.

One marcher, Sandor Kerekes, said he had come to the event from the ethnic Hungarian-majority town of Fantanele, in Romania’s Transylvania region.

“It’s important for us to feel like we can meet with like-minded people, that we think the same things and think with unity,” he said, adding that he expected the most important message from Mr Orban’s speech to be “togetherness, peace and harmony for all nations”.

More in this section

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited