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by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief
BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – Hungary’s largest opposition party, Fidesz, re-elected former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán as its leader Saturday despite the party’s crushing election defeat in April and fresh allegations that his government secretly considered establishing a migrant reception center while publicly opposing migration.
Orbán, 62, won 729 of 737 delegate votes at the party’s congress, according to official results. He faced no challenger.
“I do not give up, I never, never, never, never, never give up,” Orbán told delegates, while taking responsibility for Fidesz’s loss to Prime Minister Péter Magyar’s center-right Tisza party in the April 12 election.
The former prime minister said Fidesz had been a successful governing party for 16 years but must now adapt to its role in opposition and prepare for a possible return to power.
MIGRATION CLAIMS EMERGE
The congress was overshadowed by allegations from Prime Minister Magyar that documents show the previous Orbán government considered creating a migrant reception center in the northwestern village of Vitnyéd after the European Union imposed heavy fines on Hungary over its asylum policies.
According to Magyar, cabinet documents from 2024 indicate that former Interior Minister Sándor Pintér was authorized to prepare a site capable of housing up to 500 asylum seekers, despite repeated government denials that such plans existed.
The former government had insisted the site was intended for other purposes, while residents staged protests amid concerns that a migrant facility was being developed near the Austrian border.
POLITICAL PRESSURE
Magyar said the newly released documents appeared to contradict previous government statements and suggested that a parliamentary investigation could follow.
The allegations add to mounting pressure on Orbán, whose political future has been questioned since Fidesz lost power after 16 years in government.
Recent opinion polls suggest support for Fidesz has fallen sharply since the election, while backing for Tisza has increased, strengthening Magyar’s position as Hungary’s prime minister.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
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