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Incoming Hungarian leader Magyar vows to suspend state news broadcasts

Peter Magyar wants to restore media independence after his landslide election win, ending Viktor Orban’s 16-year rule

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Hungary’s Prime minister-elect Peter Magyar in Budapest on Wednesday. Photo: AFP
Reuters

Hungary’s election winner Peter Magyar said on Wednesday he will suspend state media news broadcasts, which critics at home and abroad say became a government mouthpiece under Viktor Orban, ‌and restore media freedoms after his cabinet takes power.

Magyar’s TISZA (Respect and Freedom) party won a landslide victory in Sunday’s election, ending Orban’s 16-year rule that became a prototype for “illiberal” conservative rulers across the Western world.

“Every Hungarian deserves a public service media that broadcasts the truth,” Magyar said on Kossuth state ⁠radio, where Orban had been a weekly guest while opposition politicians rarely got invited.

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“We will ‌need a little time to pass a new media law, a new media authority and setting up the professional conditions ‌for state media to actually do what it is meant to do,” ⁠Magyar added.

“We have ⁠just witnessed the last days of a propaganda machine. After the formation of the TISZA government, ‌we will suspend the news services of the “public” media until its public service character is restored,” he wrote ‌on X ‌after he was interviewed on state television.

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Orban has denied eroding any democratic ‌standards and said his government had aimed to protect Hungary’s Christian character against liberal ideas ⁠fielded by the European Union.

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