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Hungary’s new PM threatens constitutional changes to oust president

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Hungary’s new PM threatens constitutional changes to oust president

Peter Magyar has demanded the resignation of President Tamas Sulyok over an alleged failure to represent “national unity” Published 1 Jun, 2026 17:43 file photo. Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Magyar (R) shakes hands with Hungarian President Tamas Sulyok (L). ©  Getty Images / Janos Kummer

Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Magyar has threatened legal action against the country’s president, demanding that the official, who was elected under his predecessor Viktor Orban, step down from office.

Magyar, whose Tisza party beat Orban’s Fidesz by a wide margin in the April general elections, has been seeking to remove key figures appointed during the 16-year rule of the former prime minister.

President Tamas Sulyok, who was elected by lawmakers in early 2024, has become the latest target for the ongoing purge, with Magyar accusing him of failing to represent “national unity” and serving the interests of Orban’s party.

“I have told the president that if he maintains his stance and does not resign, I will inform ...the lawmakers of Tisza about our legislative proposals today, and we will immediately start the necessary procedures,” Magyar said on Monday.

READ MORE: Orban’s successor rules out sending weapons to Ukraine 

The process would take about a month, according to Magyar, “removing all the puppets” who he accuses of “dismantling the rule of law and democracy” in the country under Orban.

The president has refused to step down, and Fidesz has accused Magyar of issuing an “unlawful ultimatum.” Sulyok’s mandate runs until 2029, and Orban’s party insists he can’t be removed from office under the current legislation. Magyar, however, has threatened to use his party’s two-thirds parliamentary majority to alter the country’s constitution, introducing legislation to make it possible.

While the president holds a largely ceremonial role in Hungary, he still has the means to potentially disrupt Magyar’s effort to dismantle the legacy of Orban. The presidency can send bills back to the parliament for reconsideration, as well as refer them to the nation’s Constitutional Court for legal evaluation.

Sulyok served as president of the Hungarian Constitutional Court from 2016 until 2024, and served prior to that as its vice president.

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