Hungary's new Prime Minister Magyar seeks to fix Poland ties
Peter Magyar's center-right Tisza Party won the parliamentary election in Hungary on April 12, 2026 — and Polish liberals were thrilled. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk wrote on X, "Welcome back to
ManyPress Editorial Team
ManyPress Editorial

Peter Magyar's center-right Tisza Party won the parliamentary election in Hungary on April 12, 2026 — and Polish liberals were thrilled. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk wrote on X, "Welcome back to Europe." He also posted a video showing him on the phone with election winner Magyar during a visit to South Korea . "I think I'm even happier than you are," Tusk enthused at the time.
On Tuesday, ten days after his inauguration on May 9, 2026, Magyar's first trip abroad took him to Poland , "our natural allies," as Hungary's new leader called the Poles last year. Historically, Poland and Hungary have mostly had close ties. Under the Polish right-wing nationalist governments of the Law and Justice Party ( PiS , 2015–2023) and the Hungarian Civic Alliance (Fidesz, 2010–2026), Warsaw and Budapest formed an illiberal, EU-critical alliance for years. However, this rapport was increasingly put under pressure, particularly since the start of the war in Ukraine. The pro-Russian policies of Hungary's long-time Prime Minister Viktor Orban were never supported by the Polish right-wing party. In late 2023, when Tusk's pro-European center-left government took the helm in Poland, relations hit rock bottom. "Everything is clear between us, we have different views on every matter, on every issue," Tusk told Polish reporters in October 2025. He added that Orban opposed democratic norms and judicial transparency. Relations between Budapest and Warsaw cooled further when Hungary granted political asylum to Poland's former Minister of Justice, Zbigniew Ziobro, and his deputy, Marcin Romanowski, following Tusk's election victory. Both politicians are under investigation at home on suspicion of corruption . The new Hungarian prime minister, however, wants to mend Polish-Hungarian relations and present himself as a reliable, pro-European partner. Magyar's visit to Poland is "symbolic" says Marcin Bosacki, State Secretary at the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Key points
- On Tuesday, ten days after his inauguration on May 9, 2026, Magyar's first trip abroad took him to Poland , "our natural allies," as Hungary's new leader called the Poles last year.
- Historically, Poland and Hungary have mostly had close ties.
- Under the Polish right-wing nationalist governments of the Law and Justice Party ( PiS , 2015–2023) and the Hungarian Civic Alliance (Fidesz, 2010–2026), Warsaw and Budapest formed an illiberal, EU…
- However, this rapport was increasingly put under pressure, particularly since the start of the war in Ukraine.
- The pro-Russian policies of Hungary's long-time Prime Minister Viktor Orban were never supported by the Polish right-wing party.
This article was independently rewritten by ManyPress editorial AI from reporting originally published by Deutsche Welle.



