Péter Magyar Calls for CPAC Funding Investigation After Ousting Viktor Orbán
Hungary’s prime minister-elect alleged that the Hungarian government had been funding CPAC events in Budapest with taxpayer money and called for a formal investigation.
Brian Daitzman is the Editor of The Intellectualist. Subscribe to his Substack.

Péter Magyar, Hungary’s prime minister-elect, said he would halt any use of state money to finance the Conservative Political Action Conference in Budapest and called for an inquiry into what he described as improper government spending, according to remarks reported by Mediaite. The report, echoed by other outlets, reflects translated versions of his public statements.
The comments come after an election that ended Viktor Orbán’s 16-year tenure and have raised questions about whether public funds were used to support recurring political events in Budapest. English-language accounts rely on translation from Hungarian. No full official transcript tied specifically to the CPAC allegation has been released. He did not present documentary evidence to support the claim.
A transcript of Mr. Magyar’s broader post-election press conference shows him outlining wider concerns about government transparency during the transition. He alleged that documents were being destroyed within ministries and said the incoming leadership lacked access to key state records. Those statements, delivered in Hungarian and reflected in available transcripts, underscore his broader framing of institutional opacity, though the CPAC-specific allegation is not contained in the excerpt reviewed.
The Conservative Political Action Conference has been held multiple times in Budapest, including a fifth gathering announced in 2026, according to the Hungarian outlet Telex. The event has featured Mr. Orbán alongside conservative political figures from Europe and the United States and has become a recurring fixture in Hungary’s political landscape.
Independent investigative reporting by the Hungarian outlet Átlátszó has found that earlier CPAC events in Budapest were financed through government-linked institutions, with estimated costs reaching into the millions of euros. Those findings were not cited as evidence in Mr. Magyar’s remarks but provide context for how the events may have been financed.





