Supported by the
Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF), Bokros was elected to the
European Parliament in the
2009 election and sat in the
European Conservatives and Reformists Group. He was a full member of the
Committee on Budgets and a substitute member of the
Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs. Bokros' nomination indicated a change of political position from conservative to liberal ideology. As a result, several prominent members left the party, including
Péter Olajos,
Kálmán Katona and former Prime Minister
Péter Boross. With MP András Csáky's quit, the Hungarian Democratic Forum's parliamentary group defunct according to the house rules in March 2009. He was the MDF's candidate for the position of Prime Minister of Hungary on the
2010 Hungarian parliamentary election. Under his influence, several other former left-wing politicians were placed on the national list, furthermore MDF entered into an electoral alliance with
Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ), which suffered a crushing defeat during the 2009 European Parliament election. After the decision, the quits became a mass phenomenon, whole local party organizations ceased to exist. On the national election, MDF came to the fifth place and received only 2.67% of the votes, thus shut out of the legislature altogether for the first time since the transition to democracy, after twenty years. Bokros left MDF when the party dissolved in 2011. The successor party,
Democratic Community of Welfare and Freedom (JESZ) called Bokros several times to give back his MEP mandate, but all relationship has been lost between Bokros and his former party. On 21 April 2013, Bokros founded the
liberal conservative Modern Hungary Movement (MoMa). The party planned to run in the
2014 European Parliament election, however its registration was refused by the National Election Office (NVI). As a result, Bokros lost his European Parliament mandate. Bokros also ran for Mayor of Budapest in the
2014 municipal election. On 29 September 2014, two other candidates, the independent György Magyar and candidate of the leftist opposition parties' Ferenc Falus withdrew from the election and supported Bokros. Bokros received 36.04% of the votes and came to the second place after
István Tarlós. He was supported by the
Together 2014,
Democratic Coalition and Budapest branch of the
Hungarian Socialist Party. ==Personal life==