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Hungary’s Magyar threatens to amend constitution to oust president

Orbán ally Tamás Sulyok on Sunday refused to comply with the prime minister’s May 31 deadline to resign.

Hungarian Prime Minister Péter Magyar on Monday threatened to amend the country’s constitution to oust President Tamás Sulyok.

Magyar said his government would attempt to use all available legal tools to remove Hungary’s head of state, an ally of former prime minister Viktor Orbán, and even change the country’s fundamental law to force his exit.

“This process will take about a month, we are trying to adopt the necessary legislation as quickly as possible, and yes, there will be talk of removing all puppets,” Magyar told reporters.

The prime minister had demanded the president’s resignation immediately after winning the national election in April. Sulyok, a little-known judge, was elevated to the presidency in 2024 after his predecessor, Katalin Novák, stepped down due to her implication in a child sexual abuse scandal.

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The incumbent prime minister alleges the current president failed to protect the rule of law, and set a May 31 deadline for his exit. But Sulyok on Sunday said he would not step down, insisting “the dignity of the presidential mandate demands of me steadfastness.” His presidential term runs through March 2029.

The European Commission has promised to free up billions of euros in EU funds if Magyar enacts sweeping reforms of Hungary’s judiciary, anti-corruption safeguards and public procurement.

Following a meeting with Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Friday, the prime minister said Budapest had convinced Brussels to free the cash. Commission officials, however, offered a more cautious response, describing the deal as a political agreement on a broad direction rather than a formal decision to release funds.

Magyar’s move to alter the country’s constitution to oust Sulyok could spark a constitutional crisis, and potentially complicate a final settlement.

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