Ankur Desai
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Many carry Hungarian red, white and green flags.
MiklΓ³s is the mayor of a nearby village.
In the election campaign, Viktor OrbΓ‘n stresses one theme above all.
He stands for peace in neighbouring Ukraine, he says, while his rival, Peter Magyar, of the Tisza party, would drag Hungary into the war against Russia, with those he calls the warmongers in Brussels.
But in the crowd, mixed with the chants of his own supporters, were the chants of the opposition.
Filthy Fidesz, they shouted, a common refrain from those who accuse this government of feathering its own nest.
Viktor Orban is fighting for his political life.
I've come to Kishkun Lotshaaza, just south of Budapest, to see Peter Madjar address a Tissa party rally.
The candidate is 17 years younger than Orban.
He speaks calmly to them while Orban bellows into the microphone.
And he preaches a message of unity, of an end to the division, the constant search for external and internal enemies of the Orban years.
Driving back to Budapest, I listen to the news on the state radio.
It begins with ten minutes devoted to the Fidesz message, with just one minute for the Tisza party.
The last weeks have been marked by many scandals.
Viktor Orban has long been described as the most pro-Russian leader in the EU.
And it's not just the Russians.
Vance was in Budapest this week to lend Mr. Orban his support.
It's strange to see an election splitting NATO, the US with Orban, most other members rooting for the other side.