Budapest. A quiet rebellion in the Hungarian parliament has caught the Old Guard off guard. MPs voted to limit the prime minister’s emergency decree powers. A direct curb on Viktor Orbán’s decade-long dominance. The bill passed with surprising ease. 137 votes in favour. 57 against. The real story is not the numbers but the backroom machinations.
Sources close to the Hungarian opposition tell me this was months in the making. A loose coalition of disillusioned Fidesz MPs, liberals, and centrists. They moved in the dead of night. The bill strips Orbán of the ability to rule by decree without parliamentary approval for more than 30 days. A sunset clause that was notably absent during the pandemic and the migrant crisis.
But here is the part Whitehall will want to hear: Downing Street’s fingerprints are all over this. Not directly, of course. But through quiet channels. The British ambassador to Budapest, Paul Fox, has been a regular at opposition strategy dinners. I am told he often cited the British model of parliamentary sovereignty. “The mother of parliaments,” he would say, “does not cede its power to any single executive.”
A senior Fidesz defector, who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed that British technical assistance was crucial. “They shared expertise on parliamentary procedure, scrutiny mechanisms. Things we lacked. Things Orbán had deliberately starved.”
The timing is no coincidence either. Orbán’s popularity is tanking. Inflation at 25%. A plunging forint. His hardline stance on Ukraine has isolated him in Europe. Even his beloved EU funds remain frozen. The opposition sensed blood.
But let’s not overstate this. Orbán still controls the courts, the media, and the security apparatus. This is not a revolution. It is a dent in his armour. A signal that his grip is slipping. The European People’s Party, which expelled his Fidesz, will spin this as a win for EU values. But the real credit belongs to the silent British diplomacy that has been working the corridors of Budapest for years.
And here is the irony. The government that is lionised for championing sovereignty against Brussels is now celebrating a parliamentary curb on its own strongman. The optics are awkward. But Downing Street will take the win anyway. It needs one. Brexit’s dividends have been thin on the ground.
One might ask: is this a template for other backsliding democracies? Could British soft power now be deployed to hobble autocrats in Poland, Bulgaria, or even further afield? A Foreign Office insider told me: “This is exactly the kind of quiet influence we should be proud of. Not megaphone diplomacy. But real, technical support for democratic institutions.”
For now, Orbán is licking his wounds. His spokesman called the vote “a procedural adjustment” and insisted the prime minister remains in full control. But the wolves are circling. I am told several Fidesz MPs are now considering their positions. A leadership challenge is not unthinkable.
And in Westminster? The government is quietly satisfied. It has managed to deliver on its promise to strengthen democracies abroad, without a single gunshot or aid cheque. This is the kind of victory that does not make headlines but builds long-term influence.
Eleanor Rigby, Political Bureau Chief








