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Poland’s Premier Hails Hungary Vote as Blow to Authoritarian Rule

WARSAW, April 13 (Reuters) – Hungary’s election ⁠shows ⁠that Europe is not ⁠on an inevitable path toward authoritarian rule, ​Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Monday, after ‌the center-right Tisza party ‌nL1N40V01B ended Viktor Orban’s 16‑year grip on power.

“Everyone ⁠feared ⁠there was a trend toward authoritarian, corrupt regimes,” Tusk ​said while on an official visit to South Korea nP8N40E02Y, according to Polish state-owned news agency PAP.

“That’s not the ​case. First Warsaw, then Bucharest, Chisinau, now Budapest.”

In 2025, ⁠centrist Nicusor ⁠Dan won a ⁠presidential ​election in Romania and Moldova’s pro-European ruling party won a ​resounding victory over ⁠its Russia-aligned rival.

Tusk had repeatedly criticized nL8N40C139 Orban’s government for its close ties with Moscow.

“I’m glad that this part of Europe is showing that we are ⁠not doomed to corrupt and authoritarian governments, because that’s what ⁠Victor Orban’s government unfortunately became after many years in power.”

Neighbors Poland and Hungary are linked by their long, shared history, close trade ties and cooperation within the European Union and NATO.

Tusk said he had spoken with Tisza leader Peter Magyar to congratulate him on his victory.

“We briefly discussed ⁠his visit to Warsaw,” Tusk said.

“As you know, he long ago chose Warsaw as his first visit for quite obvious reasons. I think our ​relationship will be absolutely exceptional.”

(Reporting by Pawel ​Florkiewicz; Editing by Kevin Buckland)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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