The country has a long-developed method for beating back Russian influence

After much good news for President Putin, thanks to Donald Trump’s blundering intervention in the Middle East, the eye-popping result of Hungary’s election on Sunday night has hit the Russian despot with a serious setback. Which the American vice president’s blundering intervention in Mitteleuropa last week clearly did nothing to stop. There has been no greater friend to Russian interests among EU leaders than Viktor Orbán, whose defeat leaves his country with new rulers.

They will inherit a Hungary still dependent on Russian energy, while its reputation – and Orbán’s – has been sullied by links with the Kremlin. In the final days of the election campaign, audio emerged which appeared to show Orbán’s foreign minister Péter Szijjártó agreeing to pass sensitive European Union papers to Putin’s government. Likewise, Orbán had been openly blocking a vital €90 billion EU loan to Ukraine.

This sucking up to Russia seems to have played a key part in his government’s heavy defeat at the hands of his former loyalist, Péter Magyar. As the BBC’s Rajini Vaidyanathan reported from Budapest, “Everyone I’ve spoken to among the crowd has said the relationship between Hungary and Russia was what defined their vote.” At his victory rally, a triumphant Magyar declared that “We want to be a country that is no one’s vassal” but instead to be “a European country” once again. And in response, his supporters chanted Ruszkik haza! – “Russians go home!” – echoing many other voices celebrating across the capital – and doubtless across Europe.

Protesters had even been shouting this slogan at Orbán’s own rallies during the campaign. ITVX reported that the phrase “had gained increasing currency amid Orbán’s drift toward Moscow.” The words cut deep into Hungary’s modern history. In 2016, making an oral history series for BBC Radio 4 about the key crises of the Cold War, I had the chance to interview a man called Mátyás Sárközi.

On 23 October, 1956, he was working as a journalist in Budapest when a student demonstration mushroomed into revolution against the Soviet domination of Hungary, which had been enforced ever since the end of the Second World War. At first, the students tentatively chanted that soldiers of all nations should go home. This was brave enough, but within hours, they were chanting Ruszkik haza!

The scene Sárközi recreated 60 years later continues to play on my mind; one of those electric moments radio producers live for. As Sárközi and other young rebels told me, before the night of the 23rd was over, the hardline communist regime had rejected the students’ demands for greater freedom; workers had joined the uprising, Budapest’s 30 foot statue of Stalin had been cut down, and gun battles with the regime’s security forces had broken out. Amid the fighting outside the city’s radio station, Sárközi saw a student lying dead in the street.

Soviet tanks arrived – but eventually withdrew. For an ecstatic moment, it looked as though they had won. It seemed the reformist communist leader Imre Nagy, who had been reinstated and had taken the country out of the Warsaw Pact military alliance imposed by Moscow, would carry on, perhaps at the head of a coalition.

But then the tanks returned, in immense numbers, and smashed the capital to pieces. Nagy was tricked out of hiding, and eventually hanged. Like many of his young comrades, Sárközi fled across the border to the West, and came to Britain, where LSE students volunteered to teach the refugees English.

This was not the first time Russian forces had crushed Hungarian hopes of freedom. On the day the revolution began, the students laid a wreath at the foot of a statue commemorating a Polish general who had fought with the Hungarians in their revolution against Habsburg rule in 1848-49 – before reinforcements dispatched by Czar Nicholas I helped to put the revolt down. This too is in Hungarian minds again today.

The Times reported István Kapitány, the probable minister for the economy in Magyar’s new government, comparing their victory to the revolutions of 1848 and 1956 alike. The ghosts of 1956 were only laid to rest, if they ever were, in 1989, when Hungary began another revolution against Soviet hegemony. This time, its signature events were not street fighting or the lynching of the security police, as in 1956.

One was a huge “Pan-European Picnic” on the border with Austria – where restrictions had been loosened, opening the way for East Germans to break through the Iron Curtain, bringing the whole rusty contraption clattering to the ground. Another was the ceremonial reburial of Imre Nagy, which brought more than 100,000 Hungarians to Budapest’s Heroes Square. The final orator that day was a young liberal activist who gave an impassioned speech, demanding that the Soviets leave Hungary.

It made the young activist’s name, and his name was Viktor Orbán. On 15 March 2024, a national holiday which commemorates the revolution of 1848, Orbán – now prime minister of long standing, but