The Hungarian Prime Minister Péter Magyar has announced plans to limit the term of parliament members to twelve years, as part of a broader constitutional reform package introduced by his government. This measure would apply to future parliamentary elections starting in 2030, meaning the current parliament is not affected. The reform aims to prevent former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who held office for two separate terms totaling 20 years, from running again. Orbán, currently 63 years old, has been continuously elected since 1990 and could be ineligible under the new rules. The package also includes provisions to remove the current president, Tamás Sulyok, who was appointed by Orbán, and to set age and term limits for constitutional court judges to promote renewal within these institutions.
Lecture du biais (Centre): The article presents the proposed constitutional reforms as a balanced policy initiative aimed at preventing prolonged tenure of political figures like Viktor Orbán. It reports on both Magyar’s announcement and Orbán’s previous tenure without overtly criticizing either side. The framing remains fact
Pourquoi ces scores (Factualité 85 · Objectivité 80): The article accurately reports Magyar's proposal to limit parliamentary terms to 12 years and notes the context of Orbán's previous tenure. It provides details on the proposed constitutional changes and their implications. The tone remains neutral, though there is slight emphasis on Orbán's history



