What impact could foreign support for leaders like Orban have on democracy in other countries?
Vice President Vance on Tuesday will plunge into Europe's most volatile election in years — a Hungarian campaign engulfed by spy scandals, sabotage and unprecedented peril for MAGA's favorite foreign ally. Why it matters: Viktor Orbán is the cornerstone of President Trump's vision for Europe. The pro-Kremlin, anti-EU strongman has spent 16 years building a template for Christian nationalist rule now embraced by the American right. Trump's national security strategy openly calls for "cultivating resistance" in Europe by empowering nationalist forces like Orbán's. His defeat would shatter that model at its source. Zoom in: Vance arrives in Budapest with a clear mission: Boost Orbán as an indispensable U.S. ally in the fight against migration and the liberal European order. Orbán has led Hungary since 2010, systematically reshaping its courts, media and electoral maps to entrench his party's power — a playbook the European Parliament has called "electoral autocracy."His challenger, former ally Péter Magyar, has channeled voter anger over corruption and a struggling economy into the most serious threat to Orbán's rule in years. The big picture: Hungary's April 12 election is exposing a rare geopolitical convergence: The U.S. and Russia are both intervening to try to keep Orbán in power, while the EU and Ukraine are eager to see him gone. Washington: Trump's administration has made Orbán's survival a strategic priority — his government has served as both ideological inspiration and proof of concept for MAGA's vision of nationalist governance.Moscow: Orbán's government is Russia's most valuable ally inside both NATO and the EU — blocking Ukraine aid, vetoing sanctions and allegedly leaking sensitive information to Moscow.Brussels: No single member state has done more damage to EU unity than Hungary under Orbán. A Magyar victory would unlock billions in frozen EU funds and remove the bloc's most disruptive member overnight.Kyiv: Orbán has grown openly hostile to his war-to
Source Articles
The Atlantic (United States) | Apr 13, 2026
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