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Budapest Mayor Quits Primary, Upends Race to Challenge Orban

Budapest Mayor Quits Primary, Upends Race to Challenge Orban

The mayor of Hungary’s capital city upended the political opposition’s primary to pick a challenger to face Prime Minister Viktor Orban by quitting the race to set up an unexpected runoff.

Budapest Mayor Gergely Karacsony, until recently considered a front-runner, stepped aside on Friday and endorsed Peter Marki-Zay, a conservative city mayor in southeastern Hungary ahead of a week-long runoff that starts next week.

Marki-Zay, whose support has surged in opinion polls, will face Klara Dobrev, a European Parliament vice president, who’s seeking to become the first female prime minister. Both Dobrev and Marki-Zay have pledged to roll back Orban’s more than decade-long consolidation of power, including by voiding a constitution approved over opposition objections.

Dobrev won 35% of the vote in the first round, followed by Karacsony at 27% and Marki-Zay with 20%. The eventual winner will lead the main opposition parties, which have united for the first time in a general election against Orban. Opinion polls show them neck and neck with Orban’s Fidesz party ahead of elections likely to take place in April.

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