BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) – Many of the young Hungarians who came of age during Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s 16 years in power have never known life outside his political system. Yet it was they that were at the forefront of Sunday’s earthquake election that ejected him from office.
From chants on trams to a parliament rave, young Hungarians provided a soundtrack for Orbán’s defeat
BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) - Many of the young Hungarians who came of age during Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's 16 years in power have never known life outside his political system. Yet it was they that were at the forefront of Sunday's earthquake election that ejected him from office.
As hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets to celebrate the historic win by pro-European candidate Péter Magyar, music from some of Hungary's most popular - and most Orbán-critical - performers filled the air. Teenagers scaled Budapest's iconic Chain Bridge and blasted revolutionary anthems by artists whose songs captured young people's frustrations with the regime.
On the city's trams, buses and subway cars, young people led chants and played AI-generated fan music dedicated to Magyar.
In front of Hungary's neo-Gothic parliament building, a group called "More Techno to Parliament!" celebrated Orbán's defeat with a rave.
Such scenes underscored the important role young people played in the push to end Orbán's autocratic rule.
Before the election, a poll by 21 Research Center showed that 65% of voters under 30 supported Magyar's Tisza party, while only 14% backed Orbán, 62.
Marcell Szabó-Temple, a 26-year-old architect, grew up on the outskirts of Budapest in a family where adults didn't talk about politics in front of the children. In the 2018 election - the first in which he could vote and which Orbán won easily - he felt ambivalent about the political process.
But then Szabó-Temple entered university and experienced a political awakening. Although he went to the country's top engineering school, he said the state of higher education shocked him. Studying under what he described as an outdated curriculum in a crumbling building made him wonder: "Was this really all they could achieve in 12 years of governance? If so, we need something better."
More difficulties were to come. In 2022, more than 20 Hungarian universities were disqualified from the European Union's Erasmus exchange program as a consequence of an Orbán scheme to place control of universities in the hands of public foundations headed by political appointees.
Critics warned Orbán's move was an attempt to take control of academia and stifle critical thought. Many university students and leadership protested the overhaul, but it was carried out anyway.
No longer able to study abroad, and disenchanted by another overwhelming victory by Orbán in the 2022 election, Szabó-Temple said he felt "like the world went silent for the next few years."
"I stopped caring about politics, again," he said. "It was like being back in high school: I didn't even want to hear the news."
But when Magyar, 45, broke into Hungarian politics in 2024, Szabó-Temple felt a greater hope for change than he ever had before.
Once an insider in Orbán's Fidesz party, Magyar campaigned heavily on repairing Hungary's relationship with the EU, and restoring its Western orientation that had drifted increasingly close to Russia under Orbán.
He frequently addressed young people at hundreds of rallies held across the country during his campaign, urging them to take the country's future into their own hands.
Meanwhile, a new generation of musical stars, many of whom grew to fame on the internet, began producing more political content. While outlooks for young people looked increasingly dire due to economic crises and deep social divisions, the music became openly critical of Orbán's regime.
Audiences broke out in anti-government chants during concerts at summer festivals. Government officials scolded young people for the signs of disrespect.
The musical movement reached its apex two days before the election when over 100,000 people packed a sprawling square in Budapest for a "system-breaking" concert. Over 50 artists performed, and urged young people to vote for change.
After Orbán's defeat, Szabó-Temple said he plans to move back to Hungary from Portugal, where he's on a work exchange.
"There was a growing sense among young people that if we can't change the regime now, we might not want to live in Hungary for the rest of our lives. I certainly felt like that," he said.
Like many of Hungary's youth, he has high expectations for Tisza.
"We put our faith in them and we expect them to deliver," he said. "If they do, I will settle down and build a family in Hungary."

















































