It is difficult to fully describe the 2026 Hungarian parliamentary election with the usual political science categories. What is certain is that it was not a simple change of government. According to the final results, the Tisza Party won 141 seats in the 199-member parliament, while Fidesz lost power after 16 years. The election was accompanied by an extremely high turnout of almost 80 percent.
For such a situation, many of the established terms would use the terms critical choice, total reorganization or, more simply, landslide. However, they only partially cover what happened. A critical election, in the classical sense, is an election that permanently rearranges political fault lines and the structure of the party system with a particularly high turnout (Key 1955; Burnham 1970). Reorganization similarly refers to the permanent reorganization of socio-political coalitions and voter loyalties. Landslide, on the other hand, describes the extent of the victory rather than the systemic meaning of the turnaround. In the case of Hungary in 2026, however, it is not just about a large-scale victory or a reorganization of the electorate, but about the fact that the voters peacefully and constitutionally removed a ruling bloc that had been embedded for a long time.
This is why the concept of the electoral revolution justifiably arises. It is no coincidence that already on the night of the election several political scientists (for example András Bozóki) started mentioning this concept. Electoral revolution has a narrower use, also known in political science. In the work of Valerie Bunce and Sharon Wolchik, such developments are primarily related to the hybrid or authoritarian systems of the post-communist region, where the combination of the opposition, civil society and international democracy support was able to make the election a means of breaking through against the regime (Bunce and Wolchik 2011). In this model, the election was more than a procedural event: it became the central arena for challenging the regime and for a democratic breakthrough. The concept originally therefore did not simply mean a radical electoral victory, but a turn that was also connected to the nature of the regime.
At the same time, a wider usage also appeared in the literature. Andrea Lioy, for example, applies the electoral revolution to the rapid, far-reaching transformation of participation patterns, i.e. not necessarily to regime-changing events, but to events that radically transform the credibility, intensity and social significance of political competition (Lioy 2022). This broader interpretation is particularly important from the point of view of the Hungarian case, because it allows us to understand the concept not only in the scheme of “color revolutions”, but also as a democratic turn that can be grasped from the point of view of extraordinary participation, era-ending empowerment and the correction of the political system. And it is also worth noting that the concept of electoral revolutions has also been criticized on the grounds that the elections identified as such did not clearly lead to a democratic breakthrough (Kalandadze and Orenstein 2009).
The Hungarian case is interesting precisely because it partly fits, but partly differs from the Bunce-Wolchik model. It fits in that here too, the turnaround occurred in a system that many analyzes have long described as a hybrid, illiberal or competitive authoritarian system. Levitsky and Way classically define these as systems in which the opposition can indeed compete for power, but the playing field is heavily tilted in favor of the incumbent (Levitsky and Way 2010). For years, Freedom House has emphasized about Hungary that Fidesz carried out constitutional and legal changes after 2010 that made it possible to consolidate control over independent institutions (Freedom House 2025). In accordance with this, the OSCE’s 2026 preliminary assessment found that the election was competitive, but did not provide equal opportunities for the actors: the ruling party enjoyed systemic advantages, the border between the state and the party was blurred, and the media and campaign financing distorted the conditions (OSCE 2026a). It is not surprising that the 2026 democracy report of the V-Dem Institute in Gothenburg considers Hungary to be the country with the greatest democratic decline (Nord et al. 2026) and consistently considers it an electoral autocracy from 2018.
This point is crucial for the applicability of the concept in Hungary. The 2026 election does not refute, but rather retroactively confirms and adds another element to the descriptions of the regime, according to which the democratic competition in the Fidesz regime was formally preserved, but took place under permanently unequal conditions. If a government is not replaced by a routine democratic exchange economy, but by participation that is considered a historical record, and a social grand coalition that creates a broad voting base that is also considered a historical record and correspondingly plebiscite power, it highlights the fact that it was practically impossible to find a way out of the system in a normal cyclical way. Just as expected based on previous regime literature. In other words: here, the electoral revolution does not stand in opposition to previous system diagnoses, but becomes one of their strongest ex post empirical confirmations.
However, the Hungarian case is not the same as the classic pattern of Eastern European and post-Soviet “electoral revolutions” after the nineties. In them, international support, election observation, civil capacity building and diffusion effects usually played a central role (Bunce and Wolchik 2011). In the case of the 2026 Hungarian election, on the other hand, external intervention does not seem to be the primary explanatory factor. On the contrary: although the changing international context (the deterioration of relations with the EU, the escalation of the conflict with Ukraine, the impact of the US intervention in Iran, etc.) was not unimportant from the point of view of the course of events, the turn itself can be described rather as the result of a sovereign social self-correction. Therefore, the Hungarian case does not fit into the logic of the regime change of 1989-1990 and cannot simply be described as another “color revolution”. Rather, the picture emerges of an electoral revolution carried out by internal social mobilization, which showed that there was indeed a gap in the system’s shield – but it could only be found with extraordinary mass mobilization.
Therefore, from a scientific point of view, the term electoral revolution can be used fruitfully for today’s Hungary, if it is not used as a mere metaphor, but as a clearly defined concept. It does not mean an armed insurrection, an extra-constitutional takeover, and not an automatic regime change. Rather, that with exceptional participation, the voters gave the change a powerful authorization through a peaceful, electoral process that goes beyond the usual change of government and marks an era in the history of the political system. The power of the concept lies precisely in the fact that it simultaneously captures the descriptive side of the revolution – the extraordinary mobilization and the sweeping away of power – and the regime theory side (along with its normative consequences): the fact that the possibility of democratic change could only open up in this exceptional way.
Of course, all this does not mean that the electoral revolution would in itself mean democratic consolidation. The election can be revolutionary without automatically succeeding in the institutional reconstruction of the political system. The 2026 Hungarian election therefore opened up an opportunity rather than closing a story. But even this makes the use of the term very justified: what happened in Hungary was more than a critical election, it was more than a landslide and it was more than a simple change of office. This can truly be described as an electoral revolution: a bloodless, constitutional, political era change carried out by mass social force.
The author of the article is political scientist, sociologist Andrea Szabó and associate professor Zoltán Gábor Szűcs-Zágoni.
References:
- Bunce, Valerie J. – Wolchik, Sharon L. (2011): Defeating Authoritarian Leaders in Postcommunist Countries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Burnham, Walter Dean (1970): Critical Elections and the Mainsprings of American Politics. New York: WW Norton.
- Freedom House (2025): Hungary: Freedom in the World 2025 Country Report. Washington, DC: Freedom House. Kalandadze, Katya and Orenstein, Mitchell A. (2009): Electoral Protests and Democratization Beyond the Color Revolutions. Comparative Political Studies, 42(11): 1403–1425.
- Key, VO, Jr. (1955): A Theory of Critical Elections. The Journal of Politics, 17(1): 3–18.
- Levitsky, Steven – Way, Lucan A. (2010): Competitive Authoritarianism: Hybrid Regimes after the Cold War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Lioy, Andrea (2022) Towards a General Theory of Rapid Changes in Voter Turnout. Parliamentary Affairs, 75(3): 492–512.
- OSCE/ODIHR (2026a): Hungary’s parliamentary elections: vibrant, but no equal opportunities for contestants, international observers say. 13 April 2026.
- OSCE/ODIHR (2026b): Hungary, Parliamentary Elections. 12 April 2026: Interim Report, 27 March 2026.
- Nord, Marina – Altman, David – Fernandes, Tiago – Good God, Ana – Lindberg, Staffan I. (2026): Democracy Report 2026: Unraveling The Democratic Era? University of Gothenburg: V-Dem Institute.












