Hungary's ex-foreign minister Szijjártó quits parliament to join China's BYD
Péter Szijjártó, Hungary's foreign minister for twelve years and architect of Budapest's China ties, announced on July 15 that he resigned his parliamentary seat to take an international executive role at BYD, the world's largest electric vehicle maker, ahead of BYD's planned production launch in Hungary
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Summary
Péter Szijjártó, Hungary's foreign minister for twelve years and the official most responsible for Budapest's ties with China and Russia, resigned his parliamentary seat on July 15 to take an international executive role at BYD, the world's largest electric vehicle maker. He announced the move on Facebook, saying he would be responsible for external relations and the development of new business lines, per Daily News Hungary. The EV industry outlet reported the hire comes ahead of BYD's planned local production launch in Hungary. Szijjártó served under Viktor Orbán and was the architect of the government's "Eastern Opening" policy, which deepened trade and investment ties with China and Russia over EU objections.
The split
Hungarian and EU outlets (Daily News Hungary, Euronews) treat the move as a business hire by a major Chinese company with an existing Hungarian footprint. The Ukrainian wire UNN gives it a geopolitical frame, noting Szijjártó built Hungary's China and Russia relationships and is now formalising a corporate role with a Chinese state-linked firm. The EV trade press focuses on the timing: BYD has a factory under construction in Hungary and needs political access across Europe. Bloomberg and Caliber covered without additional framing.
By the numbers
- 12 years, Szijjártó served as Hungary's foreign minister under Orbán
- 1, the BYD factory under construction in Hungary, the company's first in Europe
Why it matters
Szijjártó moves from being Hungary's chief diplomat to a lobbying role for China's largest car exporter at the moment BYD is seeking regulatory and market access across the EU. His relationships with European governments, built over twelve years in office, are precisely what BYD's new international executive role requires. For the EU, which is investigating Chinese EV subsidies, the hire adds to concerns about political access.
What to watch
- Whether Szijjártó's hire prompts EU scrutiny of revolving-door rules for senior officials
- BYD's Hungary factory construction timeline and its production-start date
- How other EU member states respond to Hungary's continued alignment with Chinese corporate interests