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    HomeEmergencyHungary's opposition lead narrows slightly ahead of April vote, poll shows

    Hungary’s opposition lead narrows slightly ahead of April vote, poll shows

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    BUDAPEST, Jan 22 (Reuters) - Hungary's ​main opposition Tisza party's lead over Prime Minister Viktor Orban's Fidesz has narrowed slightly in January, a poll showed on Thursday, ahead of an April 12 election ⁠in which Orban faces a tough reelection bid.

    Nationalist Orban, in power since 2010, is facing a strong challenger for the first time in the vote, with the ‍outcome having major implications not only for Hungary but for Europe and its far-right political forces.

    Most ​polls show Fidesz trailing behind Tisza despite voter-pleasing measures after three years of economic stagnation. Pro-government pollsters show a Fidesz lead. Two other polls last week showed Tisza ​party widening its lead over Fidesz.

    Tisza, a centre-right party led by former government insider Peter Magyar, has a 9-point lead over Fidesz, down from a 12-point lead in a December survey among decided voters, pollster Republikon said.

    "The new year brought an even more intensive campaign, as Fidesz and the pro-government media threw their full ‌weight behind the theme of war, which helped the governing parties to victory ‌in 2022," Republikon said.

    Orban has framed the 2026 election as a choice between war and peace, portraying Ukraine ​as undeserving of support and his government as the only safe choice.

    Magyar's party, which was only launched in 2024, had the support of 47% of decided voters, ‌down from 48% in December. 

    Support for Fidesz grew to 38% from 36% a month ago ⁠among decided voters, according to the survey conducted between January 15 ‌and 20. Among all voters, Tisza leads on ​33%, to 28% for Fidesz.

    Among smaller parties, the far-right Our Homeland (Mi Hazank) party and the Two-Tailed Dog Party have enough support to reach the 5% threshold for getting ⁠into parliament, Republikon said. ⁠Mi Hazank is supported by 6% of decided voters while 5% back the Two-Tailed Dog ​Party.

    "Mi Hazank cannot yet be considered a certain entrant," Republikon said, adding that 27% of voters were undecided.

    (Reporting by ‌Anita Komuves; Editing by Aidan Lewis)

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