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    HomeEmergencyHungary's opposition Tisza party maintains lead as election nears, poll shows

    Hungary’s opposition Tisza party maintains lead as election nears, poll shows

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    BUDAPEST, March 11 (Reuters) - The ‌main Hungarian opposition party Tisza's lead over long-time Prime ​Minister Viktor Orban's Fidesz shrank slightly in a poll published on Wednesday, as campaigning enters ⁠its final month before an April 12 election.

    Nationalist Orban faces the biggest challenge to his rule in 16 years, although the outcome of the vote - ​coming against the backdrop of the Ukraine-Russia war and building economic challenges - remains highly uncertain, ‌with opinion polls showing that many voters are still undecided.

    A poll by 21 Research Centre (21 Kutatokozpont), conducted between March 2 and 6 and released on Wednesday, ⁠showed Tisza leads by 14 percentage points ahead of Fidesz ⁠among decided voters, down from a 16-point lead in the agency's last poll in January.

    Centre-right Tisza, led by former government insider Peter Magyar, had the support of 53% of decided voters, unchanged from January, according to 21 Research ‌Centre, while 39% backed Fidesz, up from 37% in the previous poll.

    The poll, ⁠published by news site 24.hu, showed 38% support ‌for Tisza among all voters, with Fidesz backed ​by 30%.

    Based on the poll, Tisza could win 115 seats in Hungary's 199-seat parliament, and Fidesz could expect 78 seats. The far-right Our Homeland (Mi Hazank) ‌party would be the only other party crossing ​the 5% threshold to win ⁠seats.

    Magyar has said his party would curb corruption, unlock billions of ‌euros in frozen European Union funds ⁠to boost the economy, and firmly anchor Hungary in the EU and NATO.

    Fidesz has pointed to other surveys that still show it on course to victory, ​though opponents - who criticise Orban ‌for harming the rule of law and keeping warm ties with Russia - say ⁠these have mainly been conducted by ​institutes with financial or personal ties to the ruling party.

    (Reporting by ​Anita Komuves; Editing by Alex Richardson)

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