and
Stavros Lambrinidis in January 2011 Orbán's blend of
soft Euroscepticism,
populism, and
national conservatism has seen him compared to politicians and political parties as diverse as
Jarosław Kaczyński's
Law and Justice,
Silvio Berlusconi's
Forza Italia,
Matteo Salvini's
Lega (previously
Lega Nord),
Marine Le Pen's
National Rally,
Donald Trump,
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and
Vladimir Putin. Orbán has sought to make Hungary an "ideological center for ... an international conservative movement". According to
Politico, Orbán's political philosophy "echoes the resentments of what were once the peasant and working classes" by promoting an "uncompromising defense of
national sovereignty and a transparent distrust of Europe's ruling establishments". Orbán had a close relationship with the
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, having known him for decades. He is described as "one of Mr Netanyahu's closest allies in Europe". Orbán received personal advice on economic reforms from Netanyahu, while the latter was
Finance Minister of Israel (2003–2005). In February 2019, Netanyahu thanked Orbán for "deciding to extend the embassy of Hungary in Israel to
Jerusalem". Orbán is seen as having laid out his political views most concretely in a widely cited 2014 public address at
Băile Tușnad (known in Hungary as the
Tusnádfürdői beszéd, or "Tusnádfürdő speech"). In the address, Orbán repudiated the classical liberal theory of the state as a free association of
atomistic individuals, arguing for the use of the state as the means of organizing, invigorating, or even constructing the
national community. Although this kind of state respects traditionally liberal concepts like
civic rights, it is properly called "
illiberal" because it views the community, and not the individual, as the basic political unit. a "
right-wing populist", an "
authoritarian", "
far-right", a "
fascist", "
autocratic", a "
Putinist", a "
strongman", and a "
dictator". on 13 December 2018 The European migrant crisis, coupled with continued
Islamist terrorism in the European Union, have popularized Orbán's nationalist, protectionist policies among European conservative leaders. "Once ostracized" by Europe's political elite, writes
Politico, Orbán "is now the talisman of Europe's mainstream right". in Budapest on 17 February 2022 During a press conference in January 2019, Orbán praised Brazil's then president
Jair Bolsonaro, saying that currently "the most apt definition of modern
Christian democracy can be found in Brazil, not in Europe". In support of Orbán and his ideas, a think tank called the
Danube Institute was established in 2013, funded by the Batthyány Foundation, which in turn is "funded entirely by the Hungarian government". Orbán endorsed Trump in 2016, 2020 and 2024. Orbán is widely recognized as the only European leader to publicly endorse Donald Trump in every election. In January 2022,
Donald Trump endorsed Orbán in the
2022 Hungarian parliamentary election, saying in a statement that he "truly loves his Country and wants safety for his people", and praising his hard-line immigration policies. Donald Trump's former chief strategist,
Steve Bannon, once called Orbán "Trump before Trump".
Domestic policy Viktor Orbán's domestic policy agenda has placed emphasis on
cultural conservatism, especially through
pro-natalist policies designed to encourage family formation and reduce immigration. Female university graduates who have (or adopt) children within two years of graduation receive partial or full forgiveness on their
student loans, including a full write-off of their student debt if they have three or more children. Hungarian women who have four or more children are eligible for full
income tax exemption for life. Married couples are eligible for low
fixed-rate mortgages on a house with additional financial support through family housing benefits, as well as subsidies for the purchase of seven-seat cars for families with three or more children and financial support for
child care. In support of these policies, Orbán stated in 2019 that "For the west, the answer is immigration. For every missing child there should be one coming in and then the numbers will be fine. But we do not need numbers. We need Hungarian children." The government has also tightened legal regulations on access to
abortion, including requiring pregnant women to listen to the heartbeat of the
fetus prior to an abortion being approved by a doctor. The number of abortions procured in Hungary between 2010 and 2023 fell almost 45%, from 44.8 per hundred live births in 2010 to 24.8 per hundred in 2023. As stated by
The Guardian, the "Hungarian government doubled family spending between 2010 and 2019", intending to achieve "a lasting turn in demographic processes by 2030". Orbán has espoused an anti-immigration platform, and has also advocated for increased investment into "Family First". Orbán has disregarded the European Union's attempts to promote integration as a key solution to population distribution problems in Europe. He has also supported investments into countering the country's low birth rates. Orbán has tapped into the "great replacement theory" which emulates a
nativist approach to rejecting foreign immigration out of fear of replacement by immigrants. He has stated that "If Europe is not going to be populated by Europeans in the future and we take this as given, then we are speaking about an exchange of populations, to replace the population of Europeans with others."
The Guardian stated that "This year the Hungarian government introduced a 10 million
forint (£27,000) interest-free loan for families, which does not have to be paid back if the couple has three children." His government's economic approach has been referred to as "Orbánomics". Despite early concerns that these reforms would undermine investor confidence, economic growth has been strong with
unemployment "plummeting" between 2010 and 2021 and year-on-year GDP growth at 4 percent in 2021. Hungary paid the last of its
IMF loan ahead of schedule in 2013, with the fund closing its Budapest office later that year. In December 2018, Orbán helped push through a controversial change to the Hungarian labor code that raised the annual cap on overtime from 250 to 400 hours, while giving employers up to three years to pay for the extra work hours. Due to the economic impact of
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, as well as the shocks of
COVID-19 pandemic and
lockdowns, Orbán's government has imposed
windfall taxes on banks, pharmaceutical companies, and energy companies in order to maintain a government-subsidized cap on utility bills (including gas, electricity, water, district heating, sewage, and garbage collection) which continues into 2023. Orbán's government has encouraged and provided financial support for the establishment of conservative think-tanks and cultural institutions. The
Mathias Corvinus Collegium has purchased stakes in several European universities and has purchased the
Modul University in Vienna. The think tank's Brussels branch opened in November 2022. In 2021, Orbán's government passed a bill which privatized 11 Hungarian universities and subsequently were endowed billions of euros in assets from the state budget, as well as real estate and shares in large companies. The government has appointed conservatives to the supervisory boards of these universities. As part of a drive to "
re-Christianize" the country, his government has
privatised many previously
state-run schools and enlisted Christian churches to provide education, introduced religion classes into the national education curriculum, and provided financial support to more
Christian schools. The country's
kindergarten curriculum was amended to promote "national identity, Christian cultural values, patriotism, attachment to homeland and family". Between 2010 and 2018, the number of
Catholic schools increased from 9.4 percent to 18 percent. The government also created the Center for Fundamental Rights (Hungarian: ) in 2013 who describe their mission as "preserving national identity, sovereignty and Christian social traditions".
Democratic backsliding, corruption and authoritarianism in Budapest on 20 August 2023 According to
Transparency International, Hungary was the most corrupt country in the European Union in 2023. Between 2010 and 2020, Hungary dropped 69 places in the
Press Freedom Index, lost 11 places in the
Democracy Index, and deteriorated 16 places in the
Corruption Perceptions Index. In 2019
Freedom House downgraded the country from "free" to "partly free". The
V-Dem Democracy indices rank Hungary in 2021 as 96th in its "electoral democracy index" that measures "whether elections were free and fair, as well as the prevalence of a free and independent media", sitting between
Benin and
Malaysia. Additionally, Freedom House's
Nations in Transit 2020 report reclassified Hungary from a
democracy to a transitional or
hybrid regime. Furthermore, in 2022, the
European Parliament stated that "Hungary can no longer be considered a full democracy" and that the country has become an "
electoral autocracy". The late professor of economics at
Harvard University,
János Kornai, described the evolution of the Hungarian state during Orbán's second premiership as having taken a "u-turn" away from the aim of becoming a market economy based on the rule of law and private ownership and instead beginning the "systematic destruction of the fundamental institutions of democracy". In her 2015 article on Orbán's illiberal democracy, Abby Innes, associate professor of political economy at the
London School of Economics simply states that "Hungary can no longer be ranked a democratic country". Former minister of education,
Bálint Magyar, has stated that elections in Hungary under Orbán are undemocratic and "free but not fair", due to
gerrymandering,
large-scale control over the media, and suspect funding for political campaigns. In the April 2022 election, Orbán's
Fidesz party won 54% of the vote but 83% of the districts, due to gerrymandering, and "other tweaks" to Hungarian electoral rules. According to American journalist and author
Andrew Marantz, Orbán passed laws, amended the constitution and "patiently debilitated, delegitimatized, hollowed out" civic institutions such as courts, universities, and the apparatus necessary for free elections that are now controlled by Orbán loyalists. In addition, extensive research has been conducted to describe the idea of a "national, sovereign, bourgeois Hungary" stated as the goal of Orbán's rule, is in fact a "political product" of a post-communist
mafia state serving to obscure massive corruption and transfers of wealth to those with the right connections.
Anti-LGBT policies Since his election as prime minister in 2010, Orbán has led initiatives and laws to limit
LGBT+ rights. In 2020, Orbán's government ended legal recognition of transgender people, receiving criticism both in Hungary and abroad. In 2021, his party proposed
new legislation to censor any "LGBT+ positive content" in movies, books or public advertisements and to severely restrict sex education in school forbidding any information thought to "encourage gender change or homosexuality". The law has been likened to Russia's
restriction on "homosexual propaganda". German Chancellor
Angela Merkel and
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen harshly criticized the law, while a letter from sixteen EU leaders including
Pedro Sánchez and
Mario Draghi warned against "threats against fundamental rights and in particular the principle of non-discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation". His anti-LGBT+ positions came under more scrutiny after the revelation that one of the European deputies of his party,
József Szájer, had participated in a gay sex party in
Brussels, despite the ongoing
COVID-19 pandemic quarantine restrictions. Szájer was one of the major architects behind the 2011
Constitution of Hungary. This new constitution has been criticized by
Human Rights Watch for being discriminatory towards the LGBT+ community. To coincide with the parliamentary election in the spring of 2022, Orbán announced a
four-question referendum regarding LGBTQ issues in education. It did not pass. It came after complaints from the
European Union (EU) about anti-LGBTQ discriminatory laws. Human rights groups condemned the referendum as
anti-LGBT rhetoric that supported discrimination. On 22 July 2023, in a speech he gave in Romania, Orbán complained that the EU was conducting an "LGBTQ offensive". On 18 March 2025, the
Parliament voted in favor of
a ban on Pride parades.
Green transition and climate change When US president
Donald Trump decided to withdraw from the
Paris Agreement on climate change in 2017, Orbán stated: "In Hungary, there is a consensus that climate change is real, that it is dangerous and since it is a global phenomenon, it requires global action to combat it." In October 2021, Orbán warned that the European Commission's planned
Fit for 55 climate package and the resulting high energy prices would "destroy" Europe's middle classes, saying that "those responsible for sky-high electricity and gas prices are endangering European democracy." He called the European Union's
climate protection plans a "utopian fantasy". In June 2024, Orbán expressed support for the
green transition, but criticized the way it was implemented by the "current Brussels elite". German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and the
Presidents of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso, and
Jean-Claude Juncker), intergovernmental organizations, and non-governmental organizations. He has been accused of pursuing anti-democratic reforms; attacking the human rights of the
LGBT community; reducing the independence of Hungary's press, judiciary and central bank; amending Hungary's constitution to prevent amendments to Fidesz-backed legislation; and of
cronyism and
nepotism. Orbán was accused of
pork barrel politics for building
Pancho Aréna, a 4,000-seat stadium in the village in which he grew up,
Felcsút, at a distance of some from his country house. The stadium, alongside an adjoining soccer academy, cost more than an estimated $200 million to build.
Economic cronyism In the book
The Ark of Orbán, Attila Antal wrote that the Orbán system of governance is characterized by the transformation of public money into private money, a system that has built a neo-feudal world of national capitalists, centered on the prime minister and his own family business interests. The largest share of national capitalists is the oligarchy "produced" by the system, such as , his son-in-law and
Lőrinc Mészáros, his childhood friend and his family. A 2016 opinion piece for
The New York Times by Kenneth Krushel called Orbán's political system a kleptocracy that wipes some of the country's wealth partly into its own pockets and partly into the pockets of people close to it. A 2017
Financial Times article compared the Hungarian elite under Orbán's government to
Russian oligarchs. The article noted that they differ in that Hungary's "Oligarchs" under Orbán largely benefit from EU subsidies, unlike the Russian oligarchs. The article also mentioned the sudden increase in the personal wealth of Orbán's childhood friend, Lőrinc Mészáros, thanks to winning state contracts. A 2019
New York Times investigation revealed how Orbán leased plots of farm land to politically connected individuals and supporters of his and his party, thereby channeling disproportionate amounts of the
EU's agricultural subsidies Hungary receives every year into the pockets of cronies.
Opposition to European integration in June 2024 Some opposition parties and critics also consider Orbán an opponent of European integration. In 2000, opposition parties MSZP and SZDSZ and the left-wing press presented Orbán's comment that "there's life outside the EU" as proof of his
anti-Europeanism and sympathies with the
radical right. In the same press conference, Orbán clarified that "It will not be a tragedy if we cannot join the EU in 2003. (...) But this is not what we are preparing for. We are trying to urge our integration [into the EU], because it may give a new push to the economy." Despite the anti-EU rhetoric from Orbán, Hungary under Orbán supports
enlargement of the European Union with
Serbia,
Albania,
Moldova,
Montenegro,
North Macedonia,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,,
Georgia and
Turkey Migrant crisis Hungarian-American business magnate and political activist
George Soros criticized Orbán's handling of the European migrant crisis in 2015, saying: "His plan treats the protection of national borders as the objective and the refugees as an obstacle. Our plan treats the protection of refugees as the objective and national borders as the obstacle." Orbán has been critical of German Chancellor
Angela Merkel's decision to open Germany's borders to migrants in 2015. but he himself has been criticized for engineering the
2015 European migrant crisis for his own political gain. Specifically, he has been accused of mistreating migrants within Hungary and later sending many to Western Europe in an effort to stoke far-right sympathies in Western European countries. During the crisis, Orbán ordered
fences be put up across the Hungarian borders with
Serbia and
Croatia and refused to comply with the European Union's mandatory asylum quota. In 2015,
The New York Times acknowledged that Orbán's stance on migration is slowly becoming mainstream in European politics. Andrew Higgins interviewed Orbán's ardent critic,
György Konrád, who said that Orbán was right and Merkel was wrong concerning the handling of the migrant crisis.
Anti-Soros theme The Orbán government began to attack
George Soros and his NGOs in early 2017, particularly for his support for more open immigration. In July 2017, the Israeli ambassador in Hungary joined Jewish groups and others in denouncing a billboard campaign backed by the government. Orbán's critics claimed it "evokes memories of the Nazi posters during the
Second World War". The ambassador stated that the campaign "evokes sad memories but also sows hatred and fear", an apparent reference to the Holocaust. Hours later, Israel's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a "clarification", denouncing Soros, stating that he "continuously undermines Israel's democratically elected governments" and funded organizations "that defame the Jewish state and seek to deny it the right to defend itself". The clarification came a few days before an official visit to Hungary by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The anti-Soros messages became key elements of the government's communication and campaign since then, which, among others, also targeted the
Central European University (CEU). Journalist
Andrew Marantz argues that whether or not Soros was doing any actual harm to Hungary or conservative values, it was important to have a face to attack in a political campaign rather than abstract ideas like "globalism, multiculturalism, bureaucracy in Brussels"; and that this was a strategy explained to Orbán by political consultant
Arthur J. Finkelstein. In 2022 he was condemned by the
International Auschwitz Committee for comments in which he criticised
mixing "with non-Europeans". The Committee called on the EU to continue to distance itself from "Orbán's racist undertones and to make it clear to the world that a Mr. Orbán has no future in Europe". Others have rejected the claim that he is antisemitic, arguing that his founding of the
Holocaust Memorial Center and Memorial Day for the Hungarian Victims of the Holocaust are evidence of this. He has also been accused of rehabilitating antisemitic Hungarian historical figures and of exploiting antisemitism.
Irredentism and nativism Orbán's policy positions have been reported to lean towards
irredentism and
nativism. He has overseen the transfer of hundreds of millions of Hungarian taxpayer money for the preservation of
Hungarian language and monuments and institutions of the
Hungarian diaspora, particularly in Romania, irking the Romanian government.
Mixed-race statement In a speech delivered to the 31st
Bálványos Free Summer University and Student Camp in July 2022, Orbán expressed views that were later described as "a pure
Nazi text" that was "worthy of
Goebbels" by one of his senior advisers, Zsuzsa Hegedűs, in her letter of resignation. In the speech, Orbán stated that "Migration has split Europe in two – or I could say that it has split the West in two. One half is a world where European and non-European peoples live together. These countries are no longer nations: they are nothing more than a conglomeration of peoples" and "we are willing to mix with one another, but we do not want to become peoples of mixed-race". The speech drew condemnation from both the Romanian foreign ministry and other European leaders. Two days later, in
Vienna, Orbán made it clear, he was talking about cultures and not about race. In a letter to Orbán, Zsuzsa Hegedüs later expressed that she was proud of him, and that he could count on her like he could in the past 20 years. He also attacked billionaire
George Soros, former United States President
Barack Obama, "
globalists", and the United States'
Democratic Party. ==Personal life==