Hungary's voters wary of Ukraine aid, split on Kyiv's EU bid, poll shows

A post-election ECFR poll finds Hungarian voters—especially supporters of Peter Magyar’s Tisza party—largely oppose providing military aid (57% oppose) and financially aid to Ukraine (net opposition of 14%), with national support at 12% for military aid and 24% for financial aid. On Kyiv’s EU bid, 41% of Tisza voters back unblocking Ukraine’s accession talks (43% oppose); nationally 27% support resuming formal talks, while 54% oppose. Viktor Orban’s obstruction of EU talks could ease under Magyar, who says he won’t fast-track Ukraine’s accession and will hold a referendum after the full process, though he’s seen as more constructive toward Kyiv. The poll also shows 93% of Tisza voters expect Ukraine-Hungary relations to improve under Magyar. Energy policy remains divided: 38% want to stop Russian energy imports, 39% oppose, with Magyar pledging to end dependence on Russian oil and gas by 2035 and to review the Paks II project.
- Most Magyar voters against Hungary aiding Ukraine, split on Kyiv's EU bid, poll shows The Kyiv Independent
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- Hungary’s incoming prime minister plans a ‘regime-change celebration’ to mark Orbán’s departure The Hill
- What Europe is missing about Magyar Politico
- Magyar’s mandate: Six insights from a post-election Hungary European Council on Foreign Relations
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