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Hungarian Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsány surprisingly announced his resignation on Saturday (21 March) during the congress of the Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP). Gyurcsány, whose popularity has fallen steeply over the past two years, leaves behind a country shattered by the financial crisis. EurActiv Hungary reports.
Ferenc Gyurcsány, a wealthy businessman, became Hungary's prime minister in 2004. He won re-election in 2006, supported by his reputation as a promoter of a modern free-market economy. Since 2006, however, he has struggled to maintain a parliamentary majority amid worsening economic conditions.
A remark he made in 2006 and caught on tape caused a stir. Gyurcsány said his government had been lying "night and day" about the state of the economy, just to keep itself in power.
The IMF, the EU and World Bank agreed a $25.1 billion economic rescue package for Hungary last November. It was the biggest loan for an emerging market economy since the global crisis began.
"I hear that I am the obstacle to the cooperation required for changes, for a stable governing majority and the responsible behaviour of the opposition," Gyurcsány told MSZP activists. "I am now lifting this obstacle," he added.
The PM's announcement was unexpected even among the most experienced political analysts.
The next parliamentary elections are scheduled for mid-2010. Instead of holding early elections, lawmakers are to elect Gyurcsány's successor in a vote on 14 April. The new prime minister will need the support of the centre-right opposition.
The weekend was filled with speculation over the identity of the new PM-designate, but the Socialists have remained vague so far. Andras Simor, president of the Hungarian National Bank, was among the names mentioned over the weekend.
Indeed, as the financial and economic crisis deepens, the MSZP appears to be looking for an expert capable of lifting the country out of the economic turmoil.
A member of the Hungarian government told EurActiv that the new PM "will not come from the political sphere". "It won't be exactly a professional government," the source said.
However, the Socialist candidate's name will not be announced until 6 April, after consultation between the MSZP leadership.
Gyurcsány himself did not exclude the possibility of a wider coalition, he told national TV yesterday, but the right-wing party Fidesz rejected this option. The Socialists also rejected the candidate proposed by the centre-right Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF), Lajos Bokros, saying he cannot be taken into consideration as he is being lined up for the European elections (EurActiv 03/03/09).
Fidesz and MDF are pushing for early elections to be held in parallel with European elections on 7 June, but it is doubtful that they will achieve this goal.
Meanwhile, Hungary's currency, the forint, fell to unprecedented lows against the euro.
PM's resignation follows similar moves in Latvia, Lithuania and Iceland
The 47-year-old Hungarian premier is not the first political victim of the widening recession in Europe's emerging markets.
Latvia's government resigned last month (EurActiv 27/02/09) as the economic contraction sparked rioting, while the Lithuanian administration that presided over the Baltic nation's economic decline was turfed out in elections in the autumn.
Iceland's government also collapsed as a result of the global economic crisis. Belgium has also elected a new government since the crisis hit Europe, although the context there was more complex.
The Hungarian prime minister's decision to walk away from office is bad news for Moscow, the Russian daily Kommersant writes: "Among European leaders, Gyurcsány is the strongest supporter of the [Gazprom-favoured] South Stream pipeline project. A lowering of the level of support for South Stream in the EU could make the project much more difficult to materialise."