Percorso:ANSA > Nuova Europa > News > Hungary: Fidesz projected to win on Sunday’s elections

Hungary: Fidesz projected to win on Sunday’s elections

According to Nezopont poll for Orban’s coalition 112-123 s

08 April, 13:14
Hungary Elections Hungary Elections

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) —The leader of Hungary's right-wing nationalist Jobbik party says he expects a "surprise" result in the parliamentary elections. Gabor Vona said Sunday he would resign and put his fate in the hands of his party if they don't win but plans to remain in politics nonetheless. Vona said: "I feel a surprise and a Jobbik breakthrough can be expected in the election."

Prime Minister Viktor Orban's Fidesz party is expected to win the majority of the 199 parliamentary seats, with Vona's Jobbik and a left-wing alliance of the Socialist Party and the Dialogue party led by Gergely Karacsony considered the leading challengers. In the past few years, Vona, who has been party chairman since 2006, has pushed the party to abandon its frequently anti-Roma and anti-Semitic views and toward more a mainstream conservative direction. ___

10:15 a.m. Voter turnout in the first hours of voting in Hungary's election is the highest since 1998. According to the National Election Office, 13.17 percent of eligible voters had cast ballots by 9 a.m. (0700GMT), while in 2006 turnout was 11.39 percent at the same hour. Gergely Karacsony, the leading left-wing candidate for prime minster, said Sunday the high turnout was good news for those in favor of preventing Prime Minister Viktor Orban from winning his third consecutive term. Karacsony, who heads the joint list of the Socialist Party and the Dialogue party, also said President Janos Ader, a former lawmaker for Orban's Fidesz party, had "omitted a very serious task" by not calling for Hungarians to cast their ballots in the election. ___

8 a.m. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has cast his vote in the parliamentary election, saying the ballot is about "Hungary's future." Orban, who voted with his wife at a Budapest school near their home, told a crowd of reporters that he will "respect the decision" of the Hungarian voters. Orban, who seeking his third consecutive term, and fourth overall since 1998, says he's voting early so he could keep campaigning until polling stations close Sunday evening. Orban, who focused his campaign on his harsh anti-migration stance, says it's a "misunderstanding" that his frequently harsh criticism of Brussels was directed at the whole of the European Union. He says "the EU is not in Brussels. The EU is in Berlin, in Budapest, in Warsaw, in Prague and in Bucharest. The European Union does not mean Brussels, it means the European capitals together."
/

 

(ANSA) - BELGRADE, 06 APR - The ruling coalition between Fidesz and the Christian-democrats (KDNP) is projected to win between 112 and 123 seats in the 199 seats Parliament at the parliamentary elections in Hungary, a poll of the Nezopont institute said. The elections will be held on Sunday, April 8.

The poll shows that the the right wing Jobbik party could win between 36 and 42 seats in the Parliament, followed by the Socialists (19-20), the Democratic Coalition (11-13) and the LMP party (6-8). Nezopont has forecasted a turnout of around 65%. If the Nezopont forecasts will prove correct, the coalition that supports current Prime Minister Viktor Orban could win a solid majority in the Parliament, but not a two-thirds majority, as also other opinion polls previously said. At the 2014 parliamentary elections, the Fidesz-KDNP coalition won 133 seats. The eligible voters are around eight million and in a single round they will elect for a 4-years term a unicameral Parliament composed by 199 seats. The current PM Viktor Orban is set to win its third consecutive term in the elections on Sunday, after the two victories in 2010 and 2014. (ANSA).

© Copyright ANSA - All rights reserved