JD Vance’s high-profile visit to Budapest is a “blatant” attempt to influence this week’s crucial parliamentary election in Hungary, TVP World’s Europe editor has said.
On Tuesday, the US Vice President met Viktor Orbán, the veteran Hungarian prime minister, and backed his reelection bid ahead of the April 12 vote.
“This is one of the most blatant cases of election interference I’ve seen in my rather long life,” TVP World’s Marcin Zaborowski, an expert on transatlantic relations, said.
Zaborowski, appearing on the News in Depth program, said that the trip was driven less by bilateral interests than by ideological solidarity, with Orbán seen as a symbolic European ally for Donald Trump’s political camp.
Recent independent polling has put opposition leader Péter Magyar’s Tisza party ahead of Orbán’s Fidesz, even if Hungary’s electoral system still leaves room for surprises.
A test of Trump’s European network
Vance’s appearance in Budapest broke with long-standing diplomatic conventions about engaging with electoral contests in other countries.
The vice-president praised Orbán as a defender of “Western civilization” and accused the EU of interfering in Hungary’s politics, even as he publicly wished the prime minister luck in the campaign’s final days.
Zaborowski called Vance’s intervention “clearly hypocritical,” arguing that Washington was condemning outside influence while “telling the Hungarians to vote a certain way.”
The visit also exposes the importance of the election for the wider Trump-aligned network in Europe, Zaborowski said, saying that defeat for Orbán would also mark a setback for the right-wing alliance that has treated the Hungarian leader as proof that illiberal politics can endure inside the EU.
Iran raises the economic stakes
The interview then turned to the war in Iran and Trump’s ultimatum to Tehran, which Zaborowski said looked credible because Washington had already struck military targets on Kharg Island while stopping short of direct hits on oil facilities.
For Europe, however, he argued the central issue is not only military escalation but the economic fallout, with rising fuel costs darkening the global growth outlook.
While the EU is impacted by the energy costs crisis, Zaborowski said that the countries under the greatest pressure in the immediate term are likely to be in Asia, where dependence on Middle Eastern energy flows is higher.