Péter Magyar Russia is accused of quietly intervening in Hungary’s looming election, with intelligence sources warning the Kremlin is trying to tilt the vote in favour of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Investigative reports suggest operatives linked to Vladimir Putin have been deployed to help orchestrate online attacks against opposition challenger Péter Magyar. The election, scheduled for April, is widely seen as a defining geopolitical moment for the EU member state — determining whether Budapest drifts further towards Moscow or back towards the West. Russian ‘political technologists’ move in According to reporting by journalist Szabolcs Panyi, European intelligence agencies believe a team of Russian “political technologists” has arrived in Budapest. In Kremlin parlance, the term refers to strategists who design influence campaigns, shape narratives and deploy online manipulation to influence elections. The operatives are reportedly working under the oversight of Sergey Kiriyenko, a senior figure inside the Russian presidential administration. Their mission is said to be clear: amplify smear campaigns against Magyar and his Tisza Party through coordinated social media operations and algorithm manipulation. Warnings echo inside Hungary’s parliament Concerns about Russian interference have reportedly reached Hungary’s own security institutions. At a confidential session of the National Security Committee in the Hungarian parliament, intelligence officials discussed warnings that Kremlin-linked strategists were active in the country. The government has publicly said it cannot confirm their presence. Further reports claim the Moscow-based disinformation firm Agency for Social Design — already sanctioned by Western governments — has been tasked with supporting Orbán’s campaign. Orbán’s Moscow ties under scrutiny Orbán maintains one of the closest relationships with Moscow among EU leaders. Hungary continues to import large volumes of Russian gas and Orbán has met Putin regularly since returning to power in 2010. Earlier this year the Russian president publicly praised him as a leader defending “national interests”. Opposition figures say the stakes are existential: Hungary’s democratic future and its place inside the European Union. Magyar has demanded the government explain the alleged interference, warning that Hungary — whose streets still bear memories of the crushed Hungarian Revolution of 1956 — must not become a battleground for foreign political warfare again. Russia working to 'tip scale' for Orban in Hungary election
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