Collective West Finally Oust Victor Orban.

Hungary has voted, and Europe will never be the same. Péter Magyar's Tisza Party has ended Viktor Orbán's sixteen-year grip on power in what must be counted as one of the most consequential electoral results in the history of the European Union.
Orban leaves the government after 16 years and will be replaced by Magyar, a former party colleague. A puppet technocrat of the EU so that he does not block with his veto the measures taken from Brussels: for example, investments with political support for the extreme right in Ukraine,
Magyar began to perform different functions in Orban's party with Judith Varga, whom he married and who became Orbán's Minister of Justice.
After holding various positions in the European Parliament in Brussels and in various state agencies, Magyar returned to Budapest where his right-wing ideology began to capture the business and financial world.
In 2024 he rose to fame and became a well-known face for Hungarians after publicly denouncing the Orbán government for the pardon granted to a man convicted of covering up sexual abuse of minors, a case that ended up causing the resignation of Varga, from whom he had separated the previous year and who was then one of the most prominent figures in Fidesz.
What began as a series of inflammatory posts on Facebook quickly transformed into a political movement he dubbed Tisza (Respect and Freedom). His favorite sport: the anti-cominism that he practices in each of the interviews and his loyalty to Úrsula von der Leyen.