Hungarian PM threatens to oust Orbán-era president
Hungary's new prime minister has said the government will amend the constitution to remove President Tamás Sulyok after he refused to stand down. Péter Magyar pledged to remove Sulyok and other key figures appointed by his predecessor Viktor Orbán after his landslide election wi
Hungary's new prime minister has said the government will amend the constitution to remove President Tamás Sulyok after he refused to stand down.
Péter Magyar pledged to remove Sulyok and other key figures appointed by his predecessor Viktor Orbán after his landslide election win in April.
Magyar has accused the president of serving Orbán's interests and has repeatedly called on him to quit, most recently setting a deadline of 31 May.
Sulyok, who was installed in February 2024 by Orbán's party without a direct election, has refused to resign, saying he intends to serve out his five-year term.
The stand-off leaves the new government facing a constitutional clash with a remnant of the previous regime.
Orbán's Fidesz party has called Magyar's demand an "unlawful ultimatum".
In a post on X on Sunday, Magyar said: "Tamás Sulyok has never stood up for the vulnerable, for those under attack, or for the rule of law."
He previously said Sulyok was "unworthy of representing the unity of the Hungarian nation" following the seismic political shift which April's election produced, and promised to remove him immediately after his victory.

