- Title: Hungary opposition seeks new lease of life in Budapest mayoral contest
- Date: 10th October 2019
- Summary: BUDAPEST, HUNGARY (SEPTEMBER 18, 2019) (REUTERS) KARACSONY WALKING IN STREET WITH DISTRICT MAYORAL CANDIDATE, GREETING WOMAN, WALKING PAST HIS ELECTORAL CAMPAIGN SIGN (SOUNDBITE) (Hungarian) OPPOSITION CANDIDATE FOR MAYOR OF BUDAPEST, GERGELY KARACSONY, SAYING: "This is the first election when there is a kind of dress rehearsal of the opposition parties co-operating, so from this point of view the stake is high for the whole opposition. But the real issue in a political system which tries to suffocate any social autonomy including curbing the rights of local councils, taking away tasks from them and nationalising them, - the real stake is whether Budapest, which has an opposition majority, will be able to set off changes in the country."
- Embargoed: 24th October 2019 11:22
- Keywords: Hungary elections Budapest Viktor Orban Fidesz party opinion polls Hungary
- Location: BUDAPEST AND HAJDUSZOBOSZLO, HUNGARY
- City: BUDAPEST AND HAJDUSZOBOSZLO, HUNGARY
- Country: Hungary
- Topics: Government/Politics,Elections/Voting
- Reuters ID: LVA003B0IKRW9
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Hungary's opposition could score its biggest political win in a decade if liberal hopeful Gergely Karacsony manages to unseat ruling party incumbent Istvan Tarlos in the Budapest mayoral election on Sunday - and the race appears to be tightening.
The October 13 vote will not affect Prime Minister Viktor Orban's grip on power as his cabinet has been bolstered by a strong economy, fierce anti-immigration rhetoric and double-digit wage rises. His ruling Fidesz party remains wildly popular in rural areas.
Furthermore, no general election is due until 2022 and Orban, who rose to power in 2010, holds a huge majority in parliament.
But if the 44-year-old Karacsony, currently mayor of one district of the capital, were to beat 71-year-old Tarlos, it would nevertheless expose a crack in the right-wing leader's support in the capital.
Budapest is home to about a fifth of Hungary's population of 10 million, but it is responsible for more than a third of its economic output and plays an outsized role in all walks of national life.
In European Parliament elections in May, Orban's Fidesz won 52.6% of votes cast but only 41.2% in Budapest, where thousands have taken to the streets in recent years to protest some of his reforms that critics say erode democratic standards.
Sunday's nationwide local elections will be a key test of an opposition strategy of rallying behind a single candidate against Fidesz, which has scored seven consecutive landslide election wins since 2010 on the national, municipal and European levels.
Opposition parties have united behind joint candidates in some other big cities as well.
Most polls put Tarlos, mayor of Budapest since 2010, ahead of Karacsony, although the latest survey by think tank Median indicated that the race could be a very close call.
Defeat there for the opposition, however, could call into question the viability of the opposition strategy of fielding joint candidates, seen thus far as the best way to crack Fidesz's dominance, said Andras Biro-Nagy, an analyst at think tank Policy Solutions.
(Production: Gergely Szakacs, Kriszta Fenyo, Dominik Starosz) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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