A Government election poster in Budapest, Hungary. (Photo by Laszlo Balogh / Getty Images)

Peter Franklin has written a wonderful article on Hungary’s recent elections, in which he noted that Viktor Orban’s smashing re-election is not abnormal given the opposition’s weakness. Arguments to the contrary rely on the idea that Orban’s domination of the media has created an unfair playing field that suppresses the true feelings of the Hungarian people.
Peter’s piece led me to see if I could test whether the election results were reflective of unfair tactics or were, as he contends, largely an expression of support for a course a near majority of Hungarians approve of. My review supports Peter’s contention.
My test was simple: how did Orban’s party, Fidesz, fare in each region of the country compared with its support in the last pre-Fidesz election in 2010. In 2010, Fidesz did not control the media; in 2018, it allegedly did. If the “Orban as autocrat” argument is correct, we should therefore see significant changes from 2010, especially outside of the capital of Budapest where opposition access to newspapers and television is supposedly limited.
We do not, however, see those changes. Fidesz support was down by about 8% in Budapest – the ruling party received only 38.7% there – but it was also down in virtually every other Hungarian county. Their pattern of regional strength was also largely unchanged: the party performed well in the regions where it did well in 2010 and, with one or two exceptions, performed less well in areas where it was less popular eight years ago.
The most striking difference between the two elections is also easily explained without recourse to claims of autocracy. Fidesz support increased or was roughly level in only five Hungarian counties. Tellingly, these five regions were also the far-right Jobbik party’s strongest regions in the 2010 elections, and were places where Jobbik was Fidesz’s main competition this year. It’s not surprising that, in a first-past-the-post system, some Hungarians might reluctantly choose Fidesz over an even more extreme and distasteful alternative.
Nor is it particularly surprising that Budapest residents are opposed to Fidesz. Across Europe we see the same thing: people who live in large cities, especially the capital, reject a party that campaigns on nationalistic, anti-migrant, EU-suspicious themes. That was true in the 2017 UK election, where London swung heavily against the pro-Brexit Tories, as well as in the recent French, Italian, and Czech elections. Fidesz won only six of the capital’s 18 seats, and it would have lost the other six to non-Jobbik parties had they fielded a single candidate.
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