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2010 Hungarian parliamentary election

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FieldValue
election_name2010 Hungarian parliamentary election
countryHungary
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election2006 Hungarian parliamentary election
previous_year2006
next_election2014 Hungarian parliamentary election
next_year2014
seats_for_electionAll 386 seats in the National Assembly
majority_seats194
elected_mpsMembers elected
election_date11 April 2010 (first round)
25 April 2010 (second round)
turnout64.38% (first round)
46.66% (second round)
1blank1R vote and %
2blank2R vote and %
3blankParty vote
4blank% and swing
image1[[File:Orban Viktor Portrait 2010.jpg180x180px]]
leader1Viktor Orbán
leader_since117 May 2003
party1Fidesz–KDNP
color1FF6A00
last_election1164 seats, 42.03%
seats1
Fidesz 227, KDNP 36
seat_change199
1data1**2,732,965** (53.4%)
2data1**620,232** (53.8%)
3data1**2,706,292**
4data1**52.73%** 10.70 pp
image2[[File:Mesterházy Attila 2009-12-14.JPG180x180px]]
leader2Attila Mesterházy
leader_since212 December 2009
party2Hungarian Socialist Party
seats2
last_election2190 seats, 43.21%
seat_change2131
1data21,088,374 (21.3%)
2data2326,361 (28.3%)
3data2990,428
4data219.30% 23.91 pp
image4[[File:Vona Gabor.jpg180x180px]]
leader4Gábor Vona
leader_since425 November 2006
party4Jobbik
last_election40 seats, 2.20%
seats4
seat_change447
1data4836,774 (16.4%)
2data4141,415 (12.3%)
3data4855,436
4data416.67% 14.47 pp
image5[[File:Schiffer András (VEHÍR) (cropped).jpg180x180px]]
leader5András Schiffer
leader_since5
party5Politics Can Be Different
last_election5*Did not exist*
seats5
seat_change5*New party*
1data5259,220 (5.1%)
2data543,437 (3.8%)
3data5383,876
4data57.48% *New*
map_image2010 Hungarian parliamentary election - Vote Strength.svg
map_size350px
map_captionResults of the election. A darker shade indicates a higher vote share. Proportional list results are displayed in the top left.
titleGovernment
posttitleGovernment after election
before_electionBajnai Government
before_partyMSZP
after_electionSecond Orbán Government
after_partyFidesz–KDNP

25 April 2010 (second round) 46.66% (second round)

Fidesz 227, KDNP 36

Parliamentary elections were held in Hungary on 11 and 25 April 2010 to elect the members of the National Assembly. They were the sixth free elections since the end of the communist era. 386 Members of Parliament (MPs) were elected in a combined system of party lists and electoral constituencies. Electoral law in Hungary requires candidates to gather 500 signatures from citizens supporting their candidacy.

In the first round of the elections, the conservative party Fidesz won the absolute majority of seats, enough to form a government on its own. In the second round, the alliance of Fidesz and the Christian Democratic People's Party (KDNP) won enough seats to achieve a two-thirds majority required to modify major laws and the country's constitution. They were the last elections in this country before the electoral system was completely changed.

Background

Fidesz's landslide victory was a result of massive dissatisfaction with the Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP), which had been in government since 2002. One event that provoked an especially strong backlash was the revelation that the MSZP's Ferenc Gyurcsány, Prime Minister from 2004 to 2009, had admitted in a private speech to party members that he had lied to the general public during the previous election campaign to help his party win re-election. The Őszöd speech, as it came to be called, surfaced in the press during the autumn of 2006 and resulted in nationwide protests.

Electoral system

Of the 386 seats in the National Assembly, 176 were elected from single member constituencies, 120 from multi-member constituencies and a further 90 from "compensatory" national seats.

Opinion polls

The Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF) and Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ) entered a limited electoral cooperation agreement after polls suggested that they would be unlikely to make it into parliament independently. In March 2010, polls also indicated that parliament after the election would likely be dominated by Fidesz, polling at 53–67% that month, followed by either the ruling Hungarian Socialist Party at 12–22% or newcomer Jobbik (Movement for a Better Hungary) at 11–18%.

Election Party preferences in percentage
(What percentage of eligible voters would have voted for the party)AgencyDate
**Fidesz-KDNP****MSZP****Jobbik**
Medián25 November 200966
Tárki25 November 200968
Századvég-Forsense26 November 200959
Tárki16 December 200963
Századvég-Forsense21 December 200964
Medián25 December 200961
Szonda Ipsos17 January 201063
Forsense21 January 201059
Medián21 January 201065
Századvég-Kód26 January 201059
Tárki27 January 201062
Szonda Ipsos12 February 201058
Századvég-Kód18 February 201058
Forsense22 February 201059
Medián24 February 201063
Tárki3 March 201061
Szonda Ipsos11 March 201057
date=January 2018}}14 March 201053
Medián17 March 201057
Szonda Ipsos18 March 201064
Gallup25 March 201067
Századvég-Kód29 March 201059

Controversies

The European Parliament elections of 2009 in Hungary saw the rise of right-wing and far-right parties. This trend was covered negatively by some foreign media outlets that feared the rise of intolerance and xenophobia in the country. In addition, Fidesz Member of Parliament Oszkár Molnár was accused of antisemitism after saying "I love Hungary, I love Hungarians, and I prefer Hungarian interests to global financial capital, or Jewish capital, if you like, which wants to devour the whole world, but especially Hungary." He later said that it was only a response to a speech by President of Israel Shimon Peres when he spoke of Israel's investments abroad, saying that "Israeli businessmen are investing all around the world, enjoying unparalleled success, earning economic independence. We're buying up Manhattan, Poland, Hungary and Romania." Jobbik leader Gábor Vona, also stirred up controversy with allegations of chauvinism by saying "Hungary is for Hungarians" and must be defended against "foreign speculators". Molnár also claimed that the language of instruction in Jerusalem schools was Hungarian and they were "learning the language of their future homeland". His party at the time, Fidesz, did not denounce his statement but simply said it was "embarrassing". Adding that he would not even consider ousting Molnar from his party or parliamentary faction, as the remark "did not violate the party's bylaws". Molnár also claimed that pregnant Roma women deliberately try to induce birth defects so they can give birth to "fools to receive higher family subsidies. I have checked this and it’s true; they hit their bellies with a rubber hammer so that they’ll give birth to handicapped kids." In 2011, he denounced Roma women at the Hungarian police authorities.

Foreign interference

Former Jobbik MEP Krisztina Morvai wrote an open letter to Eleni Tsakopoulos Kounalakis, the United States Ambassador to Hungary, alleging foreign interference after the ambassador visited the headquarters of three major parties but not that of Jobbik.

Results

Party list results by county

Results by county:<br />

Fidesz:
]]

County{{cite weburl=http://www.valasztas.hu/dyn/pv10/outroot/vdin1/hu/l403.htmtitle=A pártok területi listáinak eredményei országos összesítésbenFidesz-KDNPMSZPJobbikLMPMDFOthersFidesz}};"Jobbik}};"Politics Can Be Different}};"Hungarian Democratic Forum}};"
Bács-Kiskun**60.45**14.6215.705.582.231.43
Baranya**54.53**21.0712.688.902.83
Békés**53.20**18.4519.215.212.051.89
Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén**45.87**18.9027.204.201.841.98
Budapest**46.32**25.3310.8412.814.70
Csongrád**50.72**20.3815.937.662.572.75
Fejér**54.16**17.9116.206.962.692.07
Győr-Moson-Sopron**59.68**16.8712.576.322.951.60
Hajdú-Bihar**57.92**14.0418.865.052.341.78
Heves**45.78**21.0224.976.042.19
Jász-Nagykun-Szolnok**49.42**17.8824.015.652.130.91
Komárom-Esztergom**51.31**23.3913.768.373.17
Nógrád**51.84**20.3920.825.571.37
Pest**52.90**17.5816.528.352.751.89
Somogy**59.63**19.7414.236.39
Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg**53.84**14.8423.642.861.813.01
Tolna**58.68**17.8815.445.452.54
Vas**62.77**16.9612.096.371.81
Veszprém**56.79**18.8114.667.152.59
Zala**57.21**16.8516.915.802.650.58
Total**52.73**19.3016.677.482.671.16

Turnout

All times are CEST.

7:009:0011:0013:0015:0017:30Overall
1.61%10.23%24.78%35.88%46.78%59.28%64.36%
7:009:0011:0013:0015:0017:30Overall
1.36%8.50%19.37%27.11%33.54%41.89%46.52%

Post-election controversies

Four Jobbik MPs—Gábor Staudt, Gergő Balla, Zsolt Endrésik and Péter Schön—were removed from their committees because they had failed a vetting procedure that asked whether any MP's maintain contact with groups that engage in "activities that deny the basic principles of a state governed by the rule of law." Staudt, a co-founder of the Magyar Gárda Society—that was banned in 2007—had been on the national security committee, while the other three were on the defence and law enforcement committees. Staudt reacted in saying he found the result to be unconstitutional, and that he would file a criminal report with the interior minister against Defence of the Constitution Office director general László Balajti. The four would, however, continue to be MPs.

References

Notes

References

  1. "Earth Times: Hungary to hold general election on April 11".
  2. "Országos Választási Iroda - 2010 Országgyűlési Választások".
  3. (2010). "Elections in Europe: A data handbook". Nomos Publishing House.
  4. "MDF, SZDSZ plan election cooperation in Budapest". Politics.Hu.
  5. (2010-02-25). "Fidesz still forecast to win two-thirds majority at elections". Politics.Hu.
  6. (2010-02-25). "New poll reveals Fidesz leading firmly, voter activity rising". Politics.Hu.
  7. "A pártok támogatottsága novemberben".
  8. "TÁRKI - Sajtóközlemények".
  9. "Századvég-Forsense".
  10. "TÁRKI - Sajtóközlemények".
  11. "Századvég-Forsense".
  12. "Szűkülő olló".
  13. Gábor, Angyal. (17 January 2010). "Az MSZP-t sújtja a lanyha választási kedv".
  14. (21 January 2010). "Forsense: Az MSZP alig előzi meg a Jobbikot".
  15. "Trendetlenség".
  16. "Századvég-Kód".
  17. "TÁRKI - Sajtóközlemények".
  18. (12 February 2010). "A Fidesz rontott, a Jobbik történelmi csúcson".
  19. "Századvég-Kód".
  20. "Forsense » Fenyegető környezeti problémák".
  21. (24 February 2010). "Nő a szavazókedv, erősödik a Jobbik".
  22. "TÁRKI - Sajtóközlemények".
  23. "Szonda Ipsos".
  24. (January 2018)
  25. "Mindnyájuknak el kell menni...".
  26. "Kossuth".
  27. "Analytics and Advice - Solve your organization's most pressing problems - Gallup".
  28. "Századvég-Kód".
  29. Taras, Raymond. (2012-06-30). "Xenophobia and Islamophobia in Europe". Edinburgh University Press.
  30. (2007-11-15). "Shimon Peres and the true Hungarians". hvg.hu.
  31. "Israel aims to colonize Hungary with Jews, says extreme right - Haaretz - Israel News".
  32. "Hungarian MP: Jews want to take over the world - Haaretz - Israel News".
  33. (11 January 2010). "Magzatkárosítás miatt feljelentést tett Molnár Oszkár".
  34. "Krisztina Morvai's letter to the American ambassador to Hungary".
  35. "Területi választókerületi eredmények".
  36. "Informative Data on the Number and Proportion of Those Turning out at the Parliamentary Elections".
  37. "Four Hungarian Jobbik MPs Fail Security Test - Xpatloop.com - Expat Life In Budapest, Hungary - Current affairs".
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