Alan Zendell, April 14, 2026
If there is one person to whom I turn for inspiration and truth when I write these articles, it’s historian Heather Cox Richardson, who writes extensively on Substack. I am one of millions of people who subscribe to her “Letters From an American” daily newsletter, which I find to be the most consistently valid voice trying to make sense of politics and foreign affairs.
Today, Ms. Richardson outdid herself, offering a perspective on the implications of the Hungarian people’s startling rejection of Prime Minister Viktor Orban after sixteen years in office. She notes that what we all witnessed on Sunday was a peaceful revolution staged by the people of Hungary who felt their democracy and their national heritage being ripped from them by a fascist-like political movement that wanted to replace “liberal democracy” with an autocracy based on a distorted view of Christian values.
That revolution had to overcome an election system that had been rigged as much as possible by Orban to assure that no opposition leader could ever wrest power from him. Had that proved to be true on Sunday, it would have been an adrenaline high for the Heritage Society and for Donald Trump and JD Vance who had ordained the Orban Hungarian rejection of democracy as the future model of American government.
Ms. Richardson made me realize how dramatic Orban’s defeat by former supporter Peter Magyar really was. Magyar told his people they had taken back their country and its democratic values. It’s a very big deal that the very thing the MAGA movement hung its collective hat on disappeared overnight. It’s an even bigger deal that the notion MAGA and the Heritage society have been spreading, that the Hungarian people were better off under Orban’s rule, and had rejected their previous values, was proved to be a lie when Hungarians when to the polls in record numbers to tell that to the world. If it’s breezy in your neighborhood today, you might be feeling the effect of a collective sigh of relief coming from all over Europe.
One of Richardson’s themes is that everything we see happening in the world is part of repeating cycle. Whenever we think things couldn’t possibly get worse, that they have never been as bad as they are today, she reminds us that this has all happened before, in the 1850’s, 1890’s, and 1920’s, and that the current version of MAGA is an extremist outgrowth of what Ronald Reagan and Newt Gingrich began forty-five years ago. It’s almost too ironic that average Hungarians accomplished without firing a shot what Trump encouraged Iranians to do the day he started bombing them. MAGA got a serious lesson in the right way to achieve regime change.
Richardson made a pitch for Republicans to return to their traditional values of fiscal responsibility and respect for the Constitution and the rule of law. She noted that Mitch McConnell, who spent decades building a right-wing corps of federal judges to support the growing Tea Party and MAGA movements, now seems to express contrition over having been instrumental in assisting in the overthrow of the Republican Party. Too little, too late, Mitch. Your legacy will always be helping to entrench the extremists who are trying to destroy the America we grew up in. You could have stood up for all the Republicans who simply quit under threat of a well-funded primary opponent, but that conflicted with your own designs on power.
As Richardson describes the growth of both Orban’s movement and MAGA, they both evolved out of small elite groups of people’s attempts to create oligarchies, espousing the notion that the wealthy are better suited to govern the rest of us and they should be unfettered in their power to change things. She relates that to the 1920’s, when wealthy individuals and corporations were out of control, not only in America, but throughout the industrial world. Their overreaches and excesses, much like Orban’s, led to the Great Depression, and possibly, World War 2.
Her masterstroke, today, was reprising the the words of Franklin Roosevelt in his 1932 campaign for president. Reading FDR’s promise of a “new deal for Americans” in the context of Hungary’s second revolution (they expelled the Soviets in 1958 only to be overwhelmed by military force) literally brought tears to my eyes. It’s clearly time for that kind of reset in American values. We’ve been wagged by the tail of MAGA for too long, and everything that’s happened so far in 2026 says Americans are poised to do exactly what Hungarians did last weekend.
That’s a very hopeful sign, although I don’t advocate any specific agenda. Flipping from MAGA to extreme progressivism or democratic socialism is not the antidote we need. That would just perpetuate the cycle, as MAGA goes underground preparing for their next attempted coup. America needs its leaders to remember the oaths they swore, and Americans need to replace their present leaders in both parties with people who care more about the future of all Americans than their own wealth and power.