Outgoing president Viktor Orbàn, leader of the anti-European right, still wins hands down, but what makes us think even more is the growth of the xenophobic Jobbik party. Only the official proclamation is missing, but by now Hungary has chosen to confirm its government. For Orbàn it is a dramatic victory: the conservatives of the Fidesz party, according to now consolidated projections, would have 45% of the votes which, thanks to the new electoral law, means, once again, a two-thirds majority in Parliament: 135 of the 199 seats.
The Democratic Alliance, which dreamed of beating the government that so alarms Brussels, would have achieved a rather modest result, only 25% of the votes. While the xenophobic and anti-Semitic far right of the Jobbik party (the best) is asserting itself, as feared, with 21% of the votes which - according to the rules of the Hungarian electoral law - risks becoming the second party by number of votes in Parliament.