Fidesz Sparks Outrage With AI-Generated Election Video Showing Soldier's Execution

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Viktor Orban's Fidesz party released a controversial AI-generated campaign video depicting a Hungarian soldier's execution, drawing fierce condemnation from opposition leader Peter Magyar. The 33-second video, confirmed to use Google's AI models, highlights growing concerns about artificial intelligence in political campaigns ahead of Hungary's April 12 parliamentary election.

Fidesz Deploys AI-Generated Campaign Video With Graphic War Imagery

Viktor Orban's Fidesz party has ignited political controversy in Hungary after releasing an election video created with artificial intelligence that depicts a Hungarian soldier being executed on a battlefield. The 33-second clip, published on the Facebook page of Fidesz's Budapest branch, shows a kneeling, blindfolded soldier in Hungarian uniform being shot on a rain-drenched battlefield, intercut with scenes of a little girl weeping at a window

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. The video's caption warns: "This is only a nightmare now, but Brussels is preparing to make it a reality ... Let's not take risks. Fidesz is the safe choice!" Reuters confirmed that the war video had been made with the help of Google's AI models

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Hungary Opposition Leader Condemns Fictitious Execution Scene

Peter Magyar, leader of the centre-right Tisza party, issued a forceful statement condemning the AI-generated campaign video as "sickening, unforgivable and deeply outrageous." Magyar characterized the video as soulless manipulation rather than legitimate politics

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. The Hungary opposition leader's protest comes as Viktor Orban has framed the April 12 parliamentary election as a choice between "war and peace," asserting that Magyar's Tisza party would drag Hungary into the Ukraine war at the behest of the European Union

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. Tisza has consistently stated it wants peace and would not send any weapons or troops to Ukraine.

Source: Reuters

Source: Reuters

Deepfake Technology Becomes Recurring Tool in Political Campaigns

This is not the first time Viktor Orban's Fidesz party has employed deepfake technology in its campaign strategy. Fidesz has used AI-generated election videos repeatedly in recent months, with some labeled as such and others not

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. In October, Magyar filed a criminal complaint accusing one of Orban's key political aides of using deepfake technology to impersonate him without acknowledgment in another campaign video

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. At a briefing, Orban's chief of staff Gergely Gulyas did not deny that the video had been made using artificial intelligence, which allows complex, lifelike scenes to be generated on demand without a film set or actors. He defended the imagery by noting that more than a thousand people were killed or seriously injured in the Ukraine war every day, stating "What we see is the reality of the war."

EU AI Act to Mandate Disclosures as Election Nears

The timing of this political controversy is significant as the European Union's forthcoming AI Act will make disclosures about AI-generated content compulsory

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. The EU AI Act aims to regulate artificial intelligence applications across member states, including requirements for transparency when AI is used to create synthetic media. A survey published on Thursday by the 21 Research Centre indicated that 23% of voters believe Tisza would lead Hungary into the Ukraine war if elected. While 57% of Fidesz voters answered 'yes' to this question, among Tisza's supporters the percentage was statistically zero

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. Despite the controversy, Tisza maintains an 8-12 point lead over Orban's Fidesz in most polls, though pollsters close to the government still say the governing party is ahead. The use of Google's AI models to generate emotionally charged political content raises questions about how tech companies' tools may be weaponized in elections and whether existing safeguards are sufficient to prevent misuse in high-stakes political campaigns across the European Union and beyond.

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