Budapest, Hungary. Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Magyar said on Monday that if President Tamas Sulyok does not resign, the government will launch legal proceedings to remove him from office.
Political dispute
Magyar’s centre-right Tisza party won a landslide election victory in April and said it would remove several figures appointed by Viktor Orban to key public positions over the past 16 years.
Magyar has called on Sulyok, who was elected in early 2024 by lawmakers from Orban’s Fidesz party, to step down. He accused the president of failing to represent national unity on major issues and of serving the interests of Orban and his government. Sulyok has refused to resign.
“I have told the President that if he maintains his stance and does not resign, I will inform …the lawmakers of Tisza about our legislative proposals today and we will immediately start the necessary procedures,” Magyar said.
He said the legislative process would take about a month and would involve “removing all the puppets” who took part in “dismantling the rule of law and democracy.”
Fidesz response
Orban’s Fidesz party accused Magyar of issuing an “unlawful ultimatum” and said Sulyok was fulfilling his lawful mandate, which runs until 2029 and could not be ended by removal from office.
Sulyok previously served as head of Hungary’s top court, a post to which he was also elected by Fidesz in 2016.
The presidency in Hungary is largely ceremonial, but Sulyok can refer laws back to parliament for reconsideration or forward legislation to the Constitutional Court, potentially slowing or blocking Magyar’s reform agenda.
Magyar has said he would use his party’s two-thirds parliamentary majority to amend the constitution and other legislation to force Sulyok from office.
