Peter Magyar, the leader of the Tisa party, which won the parliamentary elections in Hungary, said that he would continue to deepen relations with Georgia and would be happy to visit Tbilisi.
"Of course, we will continue good relations with Georgia... if Viktor Orban's government had strong ties with any country in the Balkans or anywhere else, this does not mean that Hungary will have worse relations with the same country," Magyar said, answering journalists' questions.
According to the portal "News Georgia", Orban was considered the main ally of the "Georgian Dream" in the European Union. Orban and Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze met regularly, discussed the common agenda, the protection of traditional values. In March, Prime Minister Kobakhidze traveled to Budapest for a conservative forum to support Orban before the elections.
Kobakhidze then called the upcoming elections in Hungary "decisive not only for Hungary, but also for the future of Europe," presenting them as a confrontation between the "sovereign government" and the "Brussels bureaucracy."
Viktor Orban paid a visit to Tbilisi in October 2024, he then congratulated Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze on the "democratic and free" elections held the day before, and also appreciated the efforts of the country's authorities "to prevent the transformation into a second Ukraine."

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