Post-Orbán Hungary: Washington’s Competing Approaches to European Policy

On April 12, 2026, the Tisza Party led by Peter Magyar secured a two-thirds constitutional majority in the Hungarian parliament, ending Viktor Orbán’s 16-year rule. 

Washington’s response reveals a fundamental divergence between two factions of the American establishment regarding the desired shape of Europe and the identity of its acceptable partners.

Donald Trump and his inner circle view a fragmented Brussels dependent on U.S. security guarantees as a more convenient partner than a strong, sovereign European Union with collective weight in trade negotiations and its own security architecture. 

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