Hungary to limit prime ministers to maximum eight-year terms | Péter Magyar


Hungary’s new government, led by Péter Magyar, has put forward a constitutional amendment that would limit prime ministers to a maximum of eight years in office, effectively barring Viktor Orbán from returning to the role.

The draft amendment was submitted on Wednesday, just over a week after the new government took office. It marked Magyar and his Tisza party’s first step in dismantling a constitution that was unilaterally rewritten and amended more than a dozen times as Orbán and his Fidesz party worked to turn Hungary into a “petri dish for illiberalism”.

During Magyar’s more than two years on the campaign trail, he repeatedly promised to bring in term limits, describing them as part of a wider push to restore the country’s democratic checks and balances.

As his party celebrated its landslide victory in last month’s election, analysts were swift to say that the new government faces a formidable task in rebuilding the country’s crumbling public services and stagnant economy, one compounded by the many Fidesz loyalists who remain in the state, media and judiciary.

The draft amendment appeared to attempt to ward off the threat of Orbán seizing on the situation to mount a comeback, noting that term limits were “essential” to restoring the rule of law. “A person who has served as prime minister, for a total of at least eight years, including any interruptions, may not be elected as prime minister,” it noted.

The calculation would apply to all prime ministerial terms held since the country’s democratisation in 1990, meaning that Orbán, who had served five terms as prime minister since 1998 – totalling 20 years in power – would be barred. The amendment, however, is far from foolproof, as any future leader with a two-thirds or supermajority could submit an amendment to extend their time in power.

Another line in the draft amendment, which is expected to pass given Tisza’s own supermajority in parliament, paves the way for the dissolution of the controversial sovereignty protection office.

Launched during Orbán’s last years in power, the office was widely accused of seeking to quell critics of his government by allowing Hungary’s intelligence services to access information on individuals and organisations without judicial oversight.

As the new government races to unlock billions in frozen EU funds, the draft amendment also addresses a longstanding point of friction with the bloc by reclaiming the foundations that, during Orbán’s time, were used to maintain nearly two dozen universities and thinktanks such as the Mathias Corvinus Collegium.

During the previous government, the foundations’ board of trustees – many of them stacked with Orbán loyalists – had been handed complete control over these assets. The result, as the draft amendment noted, had “eliminated democratic control” over these public assets and resulted in an “abuse of legislative power”.

The proposal set out that the state could potentially dissolve these foundations. “The amendment makes it clear that although the foundations … are private entities, their assets are national assets,” it said.

The draft amendment is expected to be discussed next week when the national assembly convenes.

In the weeks since his election victory, Magyar has sought to emphasise his government’s break from the past, vowing to suspend broadcasts from state media that functioned as Orbán mouthpieces, calling on Orbán-era appointees to resign, and apologising to the teachers, journalists and public figures who had been maligned by the state during Orbán’s time in power.

His government has also made clear that this stark shift also applies to foreign relations. In mid-May the new foreign minister, Anita Orbán, said she had summoned Russia’s ambassador to Hungary over a massive drone attack in Ukraine, marking a reversal of her predecessor’s seemingly servile relations with Moscow.

She said on social media: “I told the Russian ambassador that it was completely unacceptable for Hungary that they were now attacking Transcarpathia, home of the Hungarian minority. I stressed that Russia should do everything for an immediate ceasefire and a peaceful and lasting end to the war as soon as possible.”


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