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Mayor of Budapest

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Highest ranking elected official in Budapest, Hungary
Lord Mayor of Budapest
Budapest főpolgármestere
since 13 October 2019
Office of the Lord Mayor
Member ofGeneral Assembly of Budapest
SeatBudapest City Hall
Term lengthFive years, no term limit
Constituting instrumentCity Unification Act(1872)
Inaugural holderKároly Kamermayer
Formation4 November 1873
DeputyVice-Mayor
Salary62,431USD annually[1]
WebsiteBudapest.hu

TheMayor of Budapest (Hungarian:Budapest főpolgármestere, officiallyLord Mayor of the Municipality of Budapest,pronounced[ˈbudɒpɛʃtˈføːpolɡaːrmɛʃtɛrɛ]) is the head of theGeneral Assembly inBudapest,Hungary,elected directly for 5-year term since 2014 (previously municipal elections were held quadrennially). Until 1994 the mayor was elected by the General Assembly. The office was calledChairman of the Council of Budapest (Hungarian:Budapest tanácselnöke) between 1950 and 1990, during theCommunist period.

Since 1990, the position is domestically known asLord Mayor (Hungarian:főpolgármester) to distinguish the office from that of the mayors that lead each ofBudapest's 23 districts. Between 1873 and 1945, theLord Mayor of Budapest was representative of theHungarian government as head of the capital's municipal authority, similarly to theLord-Lieutenants of Counties.

History

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Austria-Hungary

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The newly elected 400-memberGeneral Assembly of Budapest held its inaugural session on 25 October 1873, as a major step in the unification process ofBuda andÓbuda on the west bank, withPest on the east bank of the riverDanube. The assembly elected the first Lord Mayor among the three candidates nominated by countersignature of KingFrancis Joseph I after consultations with theMinistry of Interior. On 30 October 1873, four candidates selected by an election commission headed by Lord MayorKároly Ráth for the position of Mayor. According to the city unification law (Statute XXXVI of 1872), the Mayor of Budapest was head of the local government, while the Lord Mayor became representative of the executive branch (the government) to establishing a two-tier local government system in Budapest. On 4 November 1873,Károly Kamermayer was elected the first Mayor of Budapest, obtaining 297 votes of the total of 348 votes.

The mayor, the two deputy mayors and the other senior officials were elected for a term of six years by a simple majority of General Assembly. The Law on classification of civil servants (Statute I of 1883) required legal and political science graduate from the office-holder. Consequently, the position was rather administrative than political position during the dual monarchy ofAustria-Hungary. Until 1945, the majority of the mayors were civil servants who were passing through the promotion ladder during their careers. The mayor also served as head of the executive council which prepared and presented cases to the General Assembly, and was responsible for financial and property management too. As Chairman of the General Assembly, the Mayor of Budapest also substituted the Lord Mayor in case of obstacles. A lot of administrative scope concentrated in the hands of the mayor (civil registration of births, marriages, citizenship naturalization, authorisation of water management etc.). Thus the administrative system of Budapest was often called as "water-headed". By 1899 some corrections were made: few minor administrative cases assigned to lower-ranking committees and councils. The mayor could exert significant influence through the appointment of the administrative staff, which also depended on the mayor's personality and habit. For instance, MayorIstván Bárczy personally directed the affairs of Budapest in practice, while the council meetings gradually became formal.

Interwar period and aftermath

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During the dual monarchy, Budapest had much greater autonomy than other towns in countryside, thus the Lord Mayor had much less jurisdiction thanIspáns (or Lord Lieutenants) of the counties. It was because of the restricted suffrage and virilism which secured wide room for maneuver for the upper middle class and the elite senior administrative bureaucracy. This tendency had crucially been changed after the defeat inWorld War I and the outbreak of theAster Revolution on 31 October 1918. Budapest became the main scene of revolutionary activity. Following the formation of theHungarian Soviet Republic in March 1919, MayorTivadar Bódy was deposed and the Communist regime set up an Executive Committee to administer the capital city. After the collapse of the Soviet Republic, AdmiralMiklós Horthy entered Budapest at the head of the National Army on 16 November 1919. He was greeted by the recurrent Bódy and other city officials in front of theHotel Gellért. In a fiery speech horthy accused the capital's citizens of betraying Hungary by supportingBolshevism. On the other hand, after the abolishment of virilism and expansion of suffrage in 1920, a party-based political system has evolved in the General Assembly of Budapest, which became more democratic and liberal than other parts of Hungary.

This phenomenon has caused several jurisdictional conflicts between the Hungarian government and the General Assembly of Budapest during the era of Prime MinisterIstván Bethlen in the 1920s. Both 1920 and 1924 municipal laws sought to limit the capital's autonomy. The most important manifestation of this intention was the expansion of the Lord Mayor's powers, who could initiate the dissolution of the General Assembly after the adoption of that laws. On 1 April 1920,Jenő Sipőcz was appointed Government Commissioner, outranking Mayor Tivadar Bódy. Bethlen'sUnity Party was also trying to extend its influence overKároly Wolff'sChristian Municipal Party which gained an absolute majority in the 1920 local election in Budapest. The United Municipal Civic Party was founded in 1924 in order to offset Wolff's influence. In practise the party functioned as the Budapest branch of the governing Unity Party.

The Statute XVIII of 1930 completely reorganized Budapest's administrative structure in the spirit of centralization. 32 life members were elected to the General Assembly by an caucus appointed by the Lord Mayor, the government's representative. The government ofGyula Gömbös launched a new offensive against the General Assembly. After the adoption of the Statute XII of 1934, the election result of the position of the Mayor and his two deputies had to be confirmed by the head of state, Regent Miklós Horthy.

Mayors of Budapest (1873–present)

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#PortraitName
(birth–death)
Term of officePolitical party
(political coalition)
Mayors of Budapest (1873–1950)
1Károly Kamermayer
(1829–1897)
4 November 187325 November 1896Independent
2József Márkus
(1852–1915)
25 November 189625 October 1897Independent
3János Halmos
(1847–1907)
8 November 189717 February 1906Independent
4István Bárczy
(1866–1943)
19 June 190610 April 1918Independent
5Tivadar Bódy
(1868–1934)
10 April 191824 March 1919Independent
Budapest was governed by an Executive Committee during theHungarian Soviet Republic
Ferenc Harrer
(1874–1969)
contested byTivadar Bódy
1 August 19196 August 1919Independent
(5)Tivadar Bódy
(1868–1934)
7 August 19191 September 1920Independent
6Jenő Sipőcz
(1878–1937)
1 September 192028 November 1934Independent
7Károly Szendy
(1885–1953)
deposed
14 December 193430 April 1944Independent
8Ákos Farkas
(1894–1955)
19 May 194423 December 1944NYKP-HM
Collapse of the local government during theSiege of Budapest
9János Csorba
(1897–1986)
19 January 194516 May 1945FKGP
10Zoltán Vas
(1903–1983)
16 May 194528 November 1945MKP
11József Kővágó
(1913–1996)
acting until 14 December
28 November 19455 June 1947FKGP
12József Bognár
(1917–1996)
18 July 194720 June 1949FKGP
13Kálmán Pongrácz
(1898–1980)
20 July 194915 June 1950MDP
Chairmen of the Council of Budapest (1950–1990)
(13)Kálmán Pongrácz
(1898–1980)
acting until 3 November
15 June 195031 October 1956MDP/MSZMP
(11)József Kővágó[2]
(1913–1996)
31 October 19564 November 1956FKGP
(13)Kálmán Pongrácz
(1898–1980)
4 November 195616 November 1958MSZMP
14József Veres
(1906–1993)
12 December 195811 March 1963MSZMP
15István Sarlós
(1921–2006)
11 March 19631 December 1970MSZMP
Lajos Kelemen
(1923–2008)
acting
1 December 19707 May 1971MSZMP
16Zoltán Szépvölgyi
(1921–2006)
7 May 197117 December 1986MSZMP
17Pál Iványi
(1942–)
1 January 198720 December 1988MSZMP
18József Bielek
(1934–2008)
10 February 198918 September 1990MSZMP
(Lord) Mayors of Budapest since 1990
19Gábor Demszky
(1952–)
31 October 19903 October 2010SZDSZ
20István Tarlós
(1948–)
3 October 201013 October 2019Fidesz
21Gergely Karácsony
(1975–)
13 October 2019IncumbentDialogue

Elections

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2024

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Overview of interim results
CandidateParty9 June

Initial result

14 June

Recount of invalid votes

12 July

Recount of valid votes - Final result

Votes%Votes%Votes%
Gergely KarácsonyDialogueDKMSZP371,46747.53371,57847.51371,53847.53
Dávid VitézyVDBLMP – Hungary's Green Party371,14347.49371,53747.50371,24547.49
András GrundtnerOur Homeland Movement38,9434.9838,9954.9938,9844.99
Total781,553100.00782,110100.00781,767100.00
Valid votes781,55396.95782,11097.02781,76796.96
Invalid/blank votes24,5893.0524,0412.9824,5483.04
Total votes806,142100.00806,151100.00806,315100.00

2019

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2019 Budapest mayoral election[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
MomentumDKMSZPPMLMPGergely Karácsony353,59350.86%N/A
Fidesz–KDNPIstván Tarlós306,60844.10%−4.96%
IndependentRóbert Puzsér30,9724.46%N/A
IndependentKrisztián Berki4,0450.58%N/A
Total votes695,218100.0%

2014

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CandidatePartyVotes%+/–
István TarlósFidesz-KDNP290,67549.06–4.31
Lajos BokrosModern Hungary Movement213,55036.04New
Gábor StaudtJobbik42,0937.10–0.17
Antal CsárdiPolitics Can Be Different33,6895.69–4.20
Zoltán BodnárHungarian Liberal Party12,4612.10New
Total592,468100.00

2010

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CandidatePartyVotes%+/–
István TarlósFidesz-KDNP321,90853.37+8.17
Csaba HorváthHungarian Socialist Party177,78329.47–17.39[a]
Benedek JávorPolitics Can Be Different59,6389.89New
Gábor StaudtJobbik43,8397.27New
Total603,168100.00

2006

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2006 Budapest mayoral election[4]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
SZDSZGábor Demszky362 28946.86%+0.16%
IndependentIstván Tarlós349 41245.20%+9.35%[a]
MDFKálmán Katona46 3676.00%N/A
MIÉPLászló Zsinka10 7911.40%−1.86%
Workers' PartyPéter Székely4 2120.54%+0.12%
Total votes773 071100.0%

2002

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2002 Budapest mayoral election[5]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
SZDSZGábor Demszky348 53446.70%−11.52%
IndependentPál Schmitt267 56335.85%−3.12%[a]
MSZPErzsébet Gy. Németh98 28913.17%N/A
MIÉPIstván Csurka24 3413.26%N/A
CentreGyörgy Droppa4 4040.59%N/A
Workers' PartyLajosné Karacs3 1210.42%−2.38%
Total votes754 674100.0%

1998

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1998 Budapest mayoral election[6]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
SZDSZGábor Demszky373 96958.22%+21.94%
FideszJános Latorcai250 33538.97%+10.54%
Workers' PartyPál Kollát18 0082.80%+0.65%
Total votes642 312100.0%

1994

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1994 Budapest mayoral election[7]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
SZDSZGábor Demszky215 37436.28%
KDNPJános Latorcai168 73128.43%
MSZPEtele Baráth155 36526.17%
FKGPJános Szabó33 6515.67%
Workers' PartyPál Kollát12 7672.15%
Republican PartyGyörgy Magyar7 7061.30%
Total votes593 594100.0%

Timeline

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(Lord) Mayors of Budapest

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Sources

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  • Sipos, András (2008). ""Dualizmus" a főváros élén. A főpolgármesteri és a polgármesteri intézmény, 1873–1950". In Feitl, István (ed.).A főváros élén. Budapest főpolgármesterei és polgármesterei, 1873–1950[=At the Helm of the Capital: Lord Mayors and Mayors of Budapest, 1873–1950] (in Hungarian). Napvilág Kiadó. pp. 11–26.ISBN 978-963-9697-19-5.

Notes

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  1. ^Compared to theSZDSZ-MSZP candidate in the previous election.

References

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  1. ^"Te jó ég! Ennyit vihet haza Budapest főpolgármestereként Karácsony Gergely".
  2. ^Lendvai, Paul (2008).One Day That Shook the Communist World: The 1956 Hungarian Uprising and Its Legacy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP.
  3. ^"Helyi önkormányzati választások 2019".valasztas.hu (in Hungarian). 13 October 2019.
  4. ^Budapest főváros főpolgármester választás eredménye (in Hungarian)
  5. ^"Végleges adatok Budapest főváros főpolgármester választás eredményéről" (in Hungarian). Önkormányzati általános választások. 2002. Retrieved22 November 2022.
  6. ^"Végleges adatok Budapest főváros főpolgármester választás eredményéről(Jegyzőkönyvi adatok)" [Final data on the result of the election of the mayor of Budapest (record data)] (in Hungarian). Static.valasztas.hu. Retrieved2022-09-21.
  7. ^Területi jegyzőkönyv adatok - Főpolgármester választás (in Hungarian)

External links

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