Hungary’s nationalist prime minister Viktor Orban pledged to “fight” for his country after casting his vote on Sunday in an election that is expected to give him a third straight term in office.
After an acrimonious campaign in which Mr Orban projected himself as a saviour of Hungary’s Christian culture against Muslim migration into Europe, all opinion polls put his Fidesz party well ahead.
A strong victory could embolden him to put more muscle into a Central European alliance against the European Union’s migration policies. Mr Orban, Hungary’s longest-serving post-communist premier, strongly opposes deeper integration of the bloc.
A landslide win would make him feel vindicated in his decision to run a single-issue campaign, arguing that migration posed a big security threat. His critics said his stance has fuelled xenophobia in Hungary.
After casting his vote in a wealthy district of Budapest with his wife, Mr Orban said Hungary’s future was at stake in the vote.
“From here I will go and take part in mobilising voters . . . I voted for Fidesz and I am asking everyone to take part in the election,” Mr Orban told a group of dozens of journalists.
Asked whether he was fighting the EU he said: “The EU is not in Brussels. The EU is in Berlin, in Budapest, in Prague and in Bucharest.”
He reiterated he would stand up for Hungary’s interests and said Hungary was a loyal member of international organisations.
“We love our country and we are fighting for our country,” Mr Orban said.
A strong win for Mr Orban would also boost other right-wing nationalists in Central Europe, in Poland and in neighbouring Austria, and expose cracks in the 28-nation EU.
“After Bavaria, Italy, the Czech and Austria have made it clear they are against immigration, now it is Hungary’s turn,” the prime minister told website Origo in an interview published on Sunday.
The EU has struggled to respond as Mr Orban’s government has used its two landslide victories in 2010 and 2014 to erode democratic checks and balances, by curbing the powers of the constitutional court, controlling the media and appointing loyalists to key positions.
Mr Orban has far-right admirers across Europe who like his tough line on migrants. He is also credited with keeping the budget deficit under control, reducing unemployment and some of Hungary’s debt, and putting its economy on a growth track.
On Friday, at his closing campaign rally, Mr Orban vowed to protect his nation from Muslim migrants.
“Migration is like rust that slowly but surely would consume Hungary,” he said.
The fierce anti-immigrant campaign has gone down well with around two million core voters of Fidesz.
According to a poll by Zavech research institute published on Friday, Fidesz had 46 per cent support among decided voters, while former far-right Jobbik, which has reshaped its image into a more moderate force, had 19 per cent.
The Socialists came in third with 14 per cent. Voter turnout was estimated between 64 and 68 per cent.
However, the polls could be unreliable as one-third of voters are undecided, and many hide their voting preference. – Reuters