Hungary's public news broadcasts halted in bid to scrap Orban-era propaganda
Hungary's main state television channel, M1, and state-run radio station, Kossuth, have temporarily halted news broadcasts. This action is part of reforms promised by the new Prime Minister Péter Magyar, who aims to make the media "independent and trustworthy" and end what he described as "propaganda broadcasts." The move follows the ousting of former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who had maintained tight control over state media for 16 years.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedHungary's main state television channel, M1, and state-run radio station, Kossuth, have temporarily halted news broadcasts. This action is part of reforms promised by the new Prime Minister Péter Magyar, who aims to make the media "independent and trustworthy" and end what he described as "propaganda broadcasts." The move follows the ousting of former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who had maintained tight control over state media for 16 years. M1 displayed a message apologizing for past lies and stating its commitment to reform. Kossuth's frequencies were replaced with classical music, and both channels' websites were also down.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedM1 displayed a message stating: 'Public media should not lie. We are sorry for doing it for so long'.
Péter Magyar described the announcement as 'the end of propaganda broadcasts'.
Reforms to media were a key campaign promise of Hungary's new Prime Minister Péter Magyar.
A state-run radio station has been suspended altogether.
Hungary's main public television channel halted news broadcasts.