Hungary’s Magyar to amend the constitution to remove President Tamas Sulyok
Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Magyar intends to amend the constitution to remove President Tamas Sulyok, whom he called a "puppet" of former Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Magyar's Tisza party secured a two-thirds parliamentary majority in April elections, enabling significant political changes.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedHungarian Prime Minister Peter Magyar intends to amend the constitution to remove President Tamas Sulyok, whom he called a "puppet" of former Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Magyar's Tisza party secured a two-thirds parliamentary majority in April elections, enabling significant political changes. Magyar had set a Sunday deadline for Sulyok to resign, but the president refused. Magyar stated that if Sulyok does not step down, he will initiate legislative procedures to remove him and other officials appointed under Orban's government, a process expected to take about a month. The president's role, though largely ceremonial, includes signing legislation and referring bills to the Constitutional Court, raising concerns about potential obstruction of the new government's agenda.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedMagyar's Tisza party won an overwhelming victory in April elections with a two-thirds majority in parliament.
Magyar called President Tamas Sulyok Orban’s “puppet” and stated he should resign.
Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Magyar plans to amend the constitution to remove President Tamas Sulyok.
President Sulyok has repeatedly rejected the prime minister’s requests to resign.
The legislative process to remove officials is expected to take about a month.