Hungarian President Tamás Sulyok has consented to leave office, signing a constitutional amendment that will terminate his presidency at midnight on Sunday.
Prime Minister Péter Magyar’s Tisza party leveraged its parliamentary majority to push the legal change through and remove Sulyok, a figure broadly viewed as an ally of ex-prime minister Viktor Orbán, who ended 16 years in power this April.
Sulyok faced a five-day window to enact the amendment or trigger a lengthy constitutional standoff and possible impeachment.
He confirmed his acceptance of the reform as the Saturday evening cutoff arrived, though in a public statement he charged Magyar’s administration with breaching legal norms.
The revision dismisses not only Sulyok but also Constitutional Court head Péter Polt.
It further strips court judges aged over 70 and bars lawmakers with three parliamentary terms from re-election, a rule impacting more than half of the sitting Fidesz representatives.
The step is the boldest action yet by the Tisza government, which perceives Sulyok as a proxy of the prior regime, since its April landslide. It has rapidly enacted sweeping constitutional overhauls.
Orbán labeled the amendment tyrannical and urged demonstrators to mobilize.
Following April’s vote, Orbán’s party has collapsed amid the unexpected loss. Orbán has largely stayed out of view and declined to occupy his parliamentary seat.
Also Read
- Youth Activist Wangchuk’s Hospitalization Sparks Escalating Protests by Cockroach Janta Party
- Social Security Cuts: What Retirees Should Really Worry About
- Japan Plans to Strengthen Nuclear Deterrence Following China’s Submarine Missile Test
- Social Security Sustainability: Why Your Retirement Isn’t at Immediate Risk


