Like many of her fellow volunteers, Hungarian beautician Krisztina Menczel sat idle in the past elections that kept nationalist Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in power.
However, opposition leader Peter Magyar’s hopes of ending Orban’s 16-year reign rest in no small part on first-time campaigners such as Menczel.
“Canvassing has a big impact,” said Menczel, who lives Jaszfenyszaru, a central Hungarian town long considered a stronghold of Orban’s Fidesz party. “Even those who wouldn’t dare reveal their political preferences come over and chat with us.”
Photo: Reuters
Magyar, a former government insider turned critic, is offering voters a radical break from Orban’s self-described “illiberal” system, vowing to crack down on corruption and improve public services.
Thanks to his party’s on-the-ground network, Orban’s grip on small towns such as Jaszfenyszaru appears to be weakening ahead of the April 12 vote.
Orban, who has criticized Ukraine and acted as a spoiler at many EU summits, has long counted on his media dominance to promote his platform.
Instead, Magyar’s Tisza party has had to rely on grassroots word-of-mouth to promote its message. While the ruling party puts up billboards, Tisza has asked its supporters to hang party signs on homes and shopfronts.
Menczel said she decided to help the party after Magyar visited the town on his nearly non-stop nationwide tour.
She now spends up to three hours a day campaigning, on top of managing Tisza’s local social media pages.
When he shot into prominence in 2024, Magyar had no party apparatus behind him, but his rise came in the wake of a child abuse pardon scandal which shook Orban’s tight grip on power.
With many Hungarians already dissatisfied with the economy, the scandal became a “tipping point,” when many voters “realized they had enough of Orban’s system,” newspaper Jelen editor-in-chief Zoltan Lakner said.
After tirelessly criss-crossing the country and a prominent social media campaign, Magyar led a previously dormant Tisza to second place behind Fidesz at the 2024 European elections.
A month after the vote, he called supporters to set up loosely connected associations to handle on-the-ground organizing, dubbed “Tisza islands,” a nod to the party sharing its name with the country’s longest river.
About 4,000 “islands” have since been established, including in rural areas which the old opposition parties had effectively abandoned, the party said.
These groups organized local community events, such as charity drives, cookouts and political discussions, before switching to full-time campaigning.
Key to these events’ success was the involvement of small and medium-sized businesses, Lakner said, describing the movement as a “revolution of entrepreneurs.”
“This also affects the islands’ attitude towards politics: They approach it pragmatically instead of ideologically, simply wanting the country to function well,” Lakner added.
Dozens of “islanders” ended up being chosen as party candidates during last year’s primaries. Many of them are locally respected professionals, such as doctors, who are completely new to politics.
“This lends them credibility, given the widespread disillusionment with professional politicians,” Centre for Fair Political Analysis researcher Bulcsu Zsiga said.
However, their political inexperience carries a “danger” which Tisza is “clearly trying to mitigate,” Zsiga said, pointing to the party’s much criticized policy of restricting media access to candidates.
Even so, drawing in local figures has helped to break the “spiral of silence” in some Fidesz-dominated rural communities, where opposition supporters previously felt isolated or reluctant to express their views, Zsiga added.
In the Hungarian countryside, activism often comes at a price, some dearer than others, as campaigners in Jaszfenyszaru can attest.
Menczel said that a close relative of the local Fidesz lawmaker stopped frequenting her salon after she posted a picture with Tisza’s candidate on social media.
Others have seen more serious consequences. Retailer Eszter Somfai had her home address shared online, after an internal party database with some 200,000 supporters’ personal details was leaked.
“But we will not let them deter us, we proudly campaign for Tisza,” Menczel said. “I feel people here are increasingly opening up... If everything is conducted fairly, then we will be victorious.”
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