Hungary's Prime Minister Peter Magyar has proposed limiting parliamentary mandates to a maximum of 12 years as part of broader constitutional reforms. This proposal was announced on social media and is part of amendments submitted to parliament. The move comes after Magyar's party, Tisza, approved a constitutional amendment earlier this June that limits the prime minister's term to two four-year terms, preventing current Prime Minister Viktor Orbán from returning to power after his recent electoral defeat. Unlike the prime ministerial term limit, which was included in Magyar's election manifesto, the 12-year parliamentary mandate restriction was not previously announced and has drawn criticism from parts of society. Magyar claims the proposal has strong public support, with many people commenting online. The new restrictions would take effect after the next parliamentary elections in 2030, meaning they would not affect the current parliament. The constitutional package also includes plans to remove President Tamás Sulyok, appointed during Orbán's tenure, and impose age and term limits on constitutional court judges and Supreme Court members to rejuvenate and depoliticize the judicI
Tendenz-Einschätzung (Mitte): The article presents the proposed constitutional reforms neutrally, outlining both the measures and the reactions to them without overtly favoring any side. It mentions criticisms from parts of society but does not frame these critiques as more significant than the stated support from Magyar. The ph


![[Video] Branko Grims: Ich tue genau das, was ich meinen Wählern versprochen habe!](https://images.weserv.nl/?url=cdn.kme.si%2Fpublic%2Fimages-cache%2F750xX%2F2026%2F05%2F18%2F6a5ca3edf38500dd5747a9cff4b73a34%2F6a49722782c45%2F6a5ca3edf38500dd5747a9cff4b73a34.jpeg&w=3840&q=75&output=webp&we)
