World
EU reset: Hungary’s incoming PM to meet Giorgia Meloni in Rome
Hungary’s Prime Minister-elect Péter Magyar will meet Italian PM Giorgia Meloni for talks on Thursday, Rome said in a statement on Wednesday but gave no further details about what the pair would talk about.
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The lack of information has led to speculation about what Magyar and Meloni could discuss and how relations between Budapest and Rome might look different after 16 years of government under previous PM Viktor Orbán.
Orbán and Meloni, who both sit on the political right, were allies, although Italy did not have the same degree of close cooperation with Hungary as it did to Robert Fico’s Slovakia or Poland under previous premier, Mateusz Morawiecki.
While both Meloni and Orbán were united in the fight against immigration and are key figures in the illiberal, right-wing camp, Italy’s PM has a far more pragmatic and less confrontational approach to the European Union than Orbán did.
And Meloni is far more pro-Ukraine as it continues to fight off Russia’s full-scale invasion than Orbán, widely seen as the most Moscow-friendly leader in Europe, ever was.
Moreover, the two parties belong to different blocs in the European Parliament.
Orbán’s Fidesz is a member of the Patriots for Europe group, while Meloni’s Brothers of Italy are the dominant force in the European Conservatives and Reformists.
Fidesz tried to join that party group in 2024 but there was pushback from several leaders, including Meloni, and the Hungarians ultimately abandoned the idea.
Hungary’s incoming governing party, Tisza, is a member of a third group in the European Parliament, the European People’s Party.
Nevertheless, it seems possible that Meloni will also be able to establish a working relationship with Magyar.
In recent weeks, several of Orbán’s allies have expressed an openness to working with the new Hungarian government, with US President Donald Trump saying he thinks Magyar is a good man and that he will do a good job.
Magyar: ‘We had to fight a different kind of mafia in Hungary’
Magyar left Hungary for Italy on Tuesday to attend the Riviera Film Festival. At the festival in Sestri Levante, the documentary film Spring Wind – The Awakening, which depicts the rise of the future prime minister, was screened.
Magyar credited that film with helping him get elected, saying it was seen online by millions of people helped them “get to know me” despite state propaganda.
“Spring Wind – The Awakening” directed by Tamas Yvan Topolanszky, chronicles the two-year campaign leading up to Magyar’s crushing victory in parliamentary elections in early April that forced Viktor Orban out of office after 16 years in power.
Before the film, voters “didn’t have the chance to get to know our goals…like my kids, watching the propaganda, they didn’t have the chance to meet with the truth,” Magyar told journalists at the Riviera International Film Festival in the Italian city of Sestri Levante.
During production, the future prime minister said he had not been able to tell whether the film would make an impact on voters ahead of elections.
But after the film’s first limited theatrical release in Hungary “I saw the result in the movie, the emotions and everything and in that moment I felt that it could have been an impact, a strong impact,” he added.
He said he had later tried to convince the filmmakers to try to show it to a wider audience. It was eventually shown on YouTube for a few days over the Easter weekend and viewed by 3.4 million people, according to producers.
“This (Easter) is the weekend when the Hungarian families are together, the younger generation, the elderly, and I hoped, and maybe I was right, that that’s the right moment for the family to sit together, to watch the film, and then to speak to each other,” he said.
Magyar said he hoped viewers would understand that the film was not about his conservative pro-EU Tisza party, but “rather about the two years of our nation, the past and the possible future of our nation.”
Magyar is due to be sworn in as prime minister in Budapest on Saturday.
World
Supreme Court rejects Virginia’s bid to restore congressional map favoring Democrats
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Friday rejected Virginia’s bid to restore a congressional map that would have given Democrats a chance to pick up four seats in the closely divided House of Representatives.
The court’s order, issued without any noted dissent, is the latest twist in the nation’s mid-decade redistricting competition. It was kicked off last year by President Donald Trump urging Republican-controlled states to redraw their lines and was supercharged by a recent Supreme Court ruling severely weakening the Voting Rights Act that opened up even more winnable seats for the GOP.
In recent days, the justices have sided with Republicans in Alabama and Louisiana who hope to redo their congressional maps to produce more GOP-leaning seats following the court’s voting rights decision.
But the Virginia situation was different, stemming from a 4-3 ruling by the Virginia Supreme Court that struck down a constitutional amendment that voters narrowly passed just last month.
The state court found that the Democratic-controlled legislature improperly began the process of placing the amendment on the ballot after early voting had begun in Virginia’s general election last fall.
The Supreme Court typically doesn’t intervene in state court proceedings unless they present an issue of federal law. Virginia Democrats had hoped to persuade the justices that the Virginia court misread federal law and Supreme Court precedent that hold that, even if early voting is underway, an election does not happen until Election Day itself.
Virginia’s amendment had been intended as a response to Republican gains in Texas, Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio, and to blunt a new map in Florida that just became law. Once the Virginia amendment passed, it briefly turned the nationwide redistricting scramble into a draw between the two parties.
That was unraveled by the Virginia Supreme Court’s decision.
The state’s attorney general, Democrat Jay Jones, slammed the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision, saying it was another example of what he described as a national attack on voting rights and the rule of law.
“Let’s be clear about what is happening. Donald Trump, Republican state legislatures, and conservative courts are systematically and unabashedly tilting power away from the people for Trump’s political gain,” Jones said in a statement issued late Friday night.
The state’s top Democrats had disagreed about whether it was even too late for help from the Supreme Court. “Time grows short, but it is not yet too late,” lawyers for the Democratic leaders of the legislature as well as the state told the justices in a brief filed Friday.
A day earlier, the office of Democratic Gov. Abigail Spanberger already had confirmed that the state will hold this year’s elections under the current districts established in 2021. Last month, Virginia Commissioner of Elections Steve Koski said a court order was needed by this past Tuesday to set the district lines for primary elections on Aug. 4.
Spanberger reacted to Friday’s decision by saying both courts had nullified the votes of the more than 3 million Virginians who cast ballots in the April 21 special election.
“These Virginians made their voices heard — casting their ballots in good faith to push back against a President who said he’s ‘entitled’ to more seats in Congress before voters go to the polls,” she posted on her X account.
The leader of the state Republican Party said the justices made the right call.
“Wisely, the Supreme Court of the United States has confirmed the judgment of the Supreme Court of Virginia,” state party chairman Jeff Ryer said. “This should once and for all put to rest the Democrats’ effort to disenfranchise half of Virginia.
___
Associated Press writer Safiyah Riddle in Montgomery, Alabama, contributed to this report.
World
Trump says Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, second in command of ISIS globally, killed in US-Nigerian operation
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President Donald Trump announced late Friday that U.S. and Nigerian forces carried out an operation that killed a global ISIS leader.
Trump identified the terrorist as Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, whom he described as ISIS’s second-in-command globally.
“Tonight, at my direction, brave American forces and the Armed Forces of Nigeria flawlessly executed a meticulously planned and very complex mission to eliminate the most active terrorist in the world from the battlefield,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social.
“Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, second in command of ISIS globally, thought he could hide in Africa, but little did he know we had sources who kept us informed on what he was doing,” Trump continued. “He will no longer terrorize the people of Africa, or help plan operations to target Americans.”
100 US TROOPS LAND IN NIGERIA AS ISLAMIC MILITANTS THREATEN WEST AFRICA REGIONAL SECURITY
President Donald Trump sits at a table monitoring military operations during Operation Epic Fury against Iran at the White House in Washington, D.C., on March 2. (The White House via X Account/Anadolu/Getty Images)
Trump also thanked the Nigerian government for its cooperation in the mission.
“With his removal, ISIS’s global operation is greatly diminished,” he added.
Additional details surrounding the mission were not immediately available.
Fox News Digital has reached out to the White House for comment.
US MILITARY IN SYRIA CARRIES OUT 10 STRIKES ON MORE THAN 30 ISIS TARGETS: PHOTOS
The announcement comes after U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said it carried out multiple strikes against more than 30 ISIS targets in Syria in February as part of a joint military effort to “sustain relentless military pressure on remnants from the terrorist network.”
CENTCOM said U.S. forces struck ISIS infrastructure and weapons-storage targets using fixed-wing, rotary-wing and unmanned aircraft.
DEADLY STRIKE ON US TROOPS TESTS TRUMP’S COUNTER-ISIS PLAN — AND HIS TRUST IN SYRIA’S NEW LEADER
The U.S. military carried out ten strikes against more than 30 ISIS targets in Syria following a December ambush that killed U.S. troops. (CENTCOM)
Trump told reporters on Jan. 27 that he had a “great conversation” with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa.
“All of the things having to do with Syria in that area are working out very, very well,” he said at the time. “So, we are very happy about it.”
CENTCOM announced in February that more than 50 ISIS terrorists had been killed or captured and more than 100 ISIS infrastructure targets struck during two months of targeted operations in Syria.
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The U.S. launched Operation Hawkeye Strike in response to an ISIS ambush that killed two U.S. service members and an American interpreter Dec. 13, 2025, in Palmyra, Syria.
Fox News Digital’s Ashley J. DiMella contributed to this report.
World
Lebanon, Israel extend nominal truce; Iran ready for ‘serious’ US talks
Lebanon’s Ministry of Health said Israeli attacks have killed 2,951 people since March 2 with at least 8,988 wounded.
Published On 16 May 2026
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