Hungary's Orbán stakes his reelection on anti-Ukraine message - MON SIX

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Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Hungary's Orbán stakes his reelection on anti-Ukraine message

Hungary's Orbán stakes his reelection on anti-Ukraine message

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Facing tough odds in an upcoming election, Hungary's pro-Russian prime minister is trying to convince voters that the greatest threat to the country is not economic stagnation — the focus of his top opponent — but neighboring Ukraine.

Associated Press A billboard showing an AI-generated image of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, center, flanked by European officials is displayed at a bus stop in Budapest, Hungary, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Bela Szandelszky) People walk with Ukrainian flags to the Russian Embassy during a solidarity march in support of Ukraine in Budapest, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, two days ahead of the fourth anniversary of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. (Noemi Bruzak/MTI via AP) A man fixes a partially damaged billboard showing an AI-generated image of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, center, flanked by European officials, in Budapest, Hungary, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Bela Szandelszky) A billboard shows an AI-generated image of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, center, flanked by European officials, in Budapest, Hungary, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Bela Szandelszky) A man passes a billboard that shows an AI-generated image of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy flanked by European officials and reads:

Hungary Anti Ukraine Campaign

Viktor Orbánis running an aggressive media campaign replete with disinformation whose central message is that Hungarians should refuse to align with the rest of Europe in supporting Ukraine againstRussia's invasion. That path, he argues, risks bankrupting the country and getting its youth killed on the front lines.

Billboards erected across the country show AI-generated images of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy flanked by European officials, holding out his hand as if demanding money. It's a not-so-subtle reference to the European Union's efforts tohelp Ukraine financially and bolster its defensesas the war enters its fifth year.

"Our message to Brussels: We won't pay!" the publicly funded billboards read.

If there had been any doubt, it became clear on Monday why the outcome of Hungary's upcoming election will reverberate beyond its borders. Hungaryblocked a new package of EU sanctionson Russia in response to interruptions in Russian oil supplies that pass through Ukraine, and vowed to veto any further pro-Ukraine policies until oil flows resume.

Orbán is widely seen asthe Kremlin's strongest allyin the EU. While almost all of the bloc's other 26 nations have distanced themselves from Russia since it launched the war on Feb. 24, 2022, Hungary has deepened cooperation.

The prime minister has cast his relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin as pragmatic, stemming from Hungary'saccess to reliable suppliesof Russian oil and gas. But Orbán'santi-LGBTQ+ policies,crackdowns on the mediaand nongovernmental organizations, and hislabeling of critics as "foreign agents"have led to accusations that he's reading from Putin's authoritarian playbook.

Campaign of fear

Orbán, who retook office in 2010,faces the strongest challengeto his power in an election set for April 12. The EU's longest-serving leader and his right-wing Fidesz party are trailing in most independent polls to an upstart center-right challenger,Péter Magyar.

A 44-year-old lawyer and former Fidesz insider who broke with the party in 2024, Magyar has focused his campaign on stemming the rising costs of living, improving social services and reining in corruption. He also promises torestore Hungary's Western orientationand bolster democratic institutions which have eroded during Orbán's 16 years in power.

His rise was aided by political scandals that have damaged the credibility of Orbán's party; apresidential pardongiven to an accomplice in a child sexual abuse case led to a public outcry, prompting the president and justice minister to resign.

Losing ground to Magyar and his Tisza party, Orbán and Fidesz have sought to change the conversation. They have blanketed the country with taxpayer-funded billboards, as well as advertisements on radio, television and social media. A petition mailed to every Hungarian of voting age claimed the EU's plans to help Ukraine financially would bring economic ruin.

Other ads, paid for by a shadowy pro-government organization with Fidesz ties, depict Magyar as a puppet of Zelenskyy and the EU who would sell out the country to foreign interests and draw Hungary into the war.

Hungary's public media, along withmany private news outletsloyal to Orbán's government, faithfully mimic the claims. They say Ukraine wants to prolong the bloody conflict that has killed tens of thousands of its citizens — and is conspiring with the EU to do it.

Disinformation is fueled by artificial intelligence

Orbán has recently claimed thatthe EU — not Russia — poses the greatest threatto Hungary. He says rising defense spending across Europe — driven by Russia's war and pressure from the U.S. to increase NATO contributions — is evidence that the EU is preparing for conflict with Moscow and plans to forcibly conscript Hungarians to fight.

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In an AI-generated video Fidesz released on social media last week, a little girl asks her forlorn mother in Hungarian: "Mommy, when is daddy coming home?"

In the next frame, the fictional father — bound, blindfolded and kneeling on a muddy battlefield — is approached by a soldier, and shot in the head. "We won't allow others to decide on the fates of our families," a narrator says. "Let's not take a risk. Fidesz is the safe choice."

Although some EU countries have proposed sending troops to Ukraine to monitor any future ceasefire, they are not intended to engage in combat, and participation would be voluntary, said András Rácz, a Russia expert at the German Council on Foreign Relations.

Rácz notes that, despite the false premise behind many of Orbán's claims, Fidesz has won two previous elections afterraising fearsthat its political opponent would drag the country into the war.

"They are trying to max this out. They have nothing else," Rácz said. "Populists often try to define an enemy, often an imaginary one, and then offer protection to the society from that enemy. Ukraine has been ideal from this perspective."

Escalating tensions

For years, Orbán has sought tostymie EU effortsto provide financial and military support to Ukraine, and he has vigorously opposed sanctions targeting Russian oil and officials.

Tensions with Ukraine grew recently after Russian oil shipments to Hungary were interrupted; Ukraine blamed the disruption on a Russian drone strike in late January that damaged a pipeline. Orbán called it blackmail.

Last week, his government retaliated byhalting diesel shipmentsto Ukraine and threatening toveto a 90-billion-euro ($106-billion) EU loandestined for Kyiv. On Monday, itblocked the 20th round of EU sanctionsagainst Russia.

The anti-Ukraine campaign has resonated with many Hungarians loyal to Fidesz. Despite Tisza's advantage in the polls, its victory is far from assured.

Still, many Hungarians are dubious of Orban's anti-Ukraine messaging. On Sunday, hundreds of Hungarians and Ukrainians, many of them refugees, gathered in central Budapest to commemorate the four-year anniversary of Russia's invasion. Marching toward a demonstration outside the Russian embassy, participants held Ukrainian and Hungarian flags, and chanted, "Stop Putin, stop the war!"

Budapest's liberal mayor, Gergely Karácsony, told The Associated Press that Orbán's messaging and policies are "a betrayal not only of Ukraine, but of Hungary's national interest."

"I hope that this will go into history as a failed policy, but that history will also remember that there were some who stood up for what is right," he said.

One of the marchers was Ester Zhivatovska, a 19-year-old veterinary medicine student who came from the Ukrainian port city of Odesa to study in Budapest. She said the billboards depicting her country's president are laughable.

"The main message of these billboards is that Ukraine will steal Hungarian money," she said. "But come on, you're using these AI images from the Hungarian budget to do what? To win elections."