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"Election Opening"
868 professional editorial images found
#13354260
21 Feb 2026
Peter Magyar, leader of the Tisza party, holds a press conference after his campaign opening speech in Budapest, Hungary, as the campaign for the 2026 Hungarian general election kicks off. The event comes as the Tisza Party leads polls, giving current Prime Minister Viktor Orban its strongest challenger in years.
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#13354266
21 Feb 2026
Peter Magyar, leader of the Tisza party, holds a press conference after his campaign opening speech in Budapest, Hungary, as the campaign for the 2026 Hungarian general election kicks off. The event comes as the Tisza Party leads polls, giving current Prime Minister Viktor Orban its strongest challenger in years.
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#13354272
21 Feb 2026
Peter Magyar, leader of the Tisza party, holds a press conference after his campaign opening speech in Budapest, Hungary, as the campaign for the 2026 Hungarian general election kicks off. The event comes as the Tisza Party leads polls, giving current Prime Minister Viktor Orban its strongest challenger in years.
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#13354274
21 Feb 2026
Peter Magyar, leader of the Tisza party, holds a press conference after his campaign opening speech in Budapest, Hungary, as the campaign for the 2026 Hungarian general election kicks off. The event comes as the Tisza Party leads polls, giving current Prime Minister Viktor Orban its strongest challenger in years.
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#13354282
21 Feb 2026
Peter Magyar, leader of the Tisza party, holds a press conference after his campaign opening speech in Budapest, Hungary, as the campaign for the 2026 Hungarian general election kicks off. The event comes as the Tisza Party leads polls, giving current Prime Minister Viktor Orban its strongest challenger in years.
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#13354286
21 Feb 2026
Peter Magyar, leader of the Tisza party, holds a press conference after his campaign opening speech in Budapest, Hungary, as the campaign for the 2026 Hungarian general election kicks off. The event comes as the Tisza Party leads polls, giving current Prime Minister Viktor Orban its strongest challenger in years.
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#13354290
21 Feb 2026
Peter Magyar, leader of the Tisza party, holds a press conference after his campaign opening speech in Budapest, Hungary, as the campaign for the 2026 Hungarian general election kicks off. The event comes as the Tisza Party leads polls, giving current Prime Minister Viktor Orban its strongest challenger in years.
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#13354291
21 Feb 2026
Peter Magyar, leader of the Tisza party, holds a press conference after his campaign opening speech in Budapest, Hungary, as the campaign for the 2026 Hungarian general election kicks off. The event comes as the Tisza Party leads polls, giving current Prime Minister Viktor Orban its strongest challenger in years.
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#13353571
21 Feb 2026
French far-right party Reconquete MEP and candidate in the Paris municipal elections, Sarah Knafo, visits the International Agricultural Show (Salon de l'Agriculture) at Paris Expo Porte de Versailles in Paris, France, on February 21, 2026.
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#13181842
11 Jan 2026
Nepali Congress cadres attend the opening ceremony of the special convention of the party organized in Kathmandu, Nepal, on January 11, 2026. The two-day event involves active participation from general secretaries Gagan Kumar Thapa and Bishwa Prakash Sharma. Acting party president and other senior party members abstain from the opening ceremony, protesting against it. The second special general convention, called by Thapa and Sharma, takes place against the backdrop of a deepening intra-party dispute. The establishment faction led by party president Sher Bahadur Deuba opposes the convention, arguing it could split the party, and instead pushes for the regular general convention scheduled for May. Thapa and Sharma maintain that the convention is demanded by 2,488 elected representatives, more than 54 percent of the total. Leaders backing the convention say over 60 percent of elected delegates participate. The Congress statute has a provision that makes it mandatory for the party leadership to call a special general convention if at least 40 percent of the party's elected general convention representatives demand it. A petition signed by 53 percent of the Nepali Congress general convention representatives is submitted at the party headquarters in mid-October, seeking a special general convention and election of a new leadership.
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#13181843
11 Jan 2026
Cadres of the Nepali Congress attend the opening ceremony of the special convention of the party organized in Kathmandu, Nepal, on January 11, 2026. The two-day event involves active participation from general secretaries Gagan Kumar Thapa and Bishwa Prakash Sharma. The acting party president and other senior party members abstain from the opening ceremony in protest. The second special general convention, called by Thapa and Sharma, takes place against the backdrop of a deepening intra-party dispute. The establishment faction, led by party president Sher Bahadur Deuba, opposes the convention, arguing it could split the party, and instead pushes for the regular general convention scheduled for May. Thapa and Sharma assert that the convention is demanded by 2,488 elected representatives, more than 54 percent of the total. Leaders supporting the convention state that over 60 percent of elected delegates participate. The Congress statute includes a provision that mandates the party leadership to call a special general convention if at least 40 percent of the party's elected general convention representatives demand it. A petition signed by 53 percent of the Nepali Congress general convention representatives is submitted at the party headquarters in mid-October, seeking a special general convention and election of new leadership.
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#13181844
11 Jan 2026
Cadres of the Nepali Congress attend the opening ceremony of the special convention of the party organized in Kathmandu, Nepal, on January 11, 2026. The two-day event involves active participation from general secretaries Gagan Kumar Thapa and Bishwa Prakash Sharma. The acting party president and other senior party members abstain from the opening ceremony in protest. The second special general convention, called by Thapa and Sharma, takes place against the backdrop of a deepening intra-party dispute. The establishment faction, led by party president Sher Bahadur Deuba, opposes the convention, arguing it could split the party, and instead pushes for the regular general convention scheduled for May. Thapa and Sharma assert that the convention is demanded by 2,488 elected representatives, more than 54 percent of the total. Leaders supporting the convention state that over 60 percent of elected delegates participate. The Congress statute includes a provision that mandates the party leadership to call a special general convention if at least 40 percent of the party's elected general convention representatives demand it. A petition signed by 53 percent of the Nepali Congress general convention representatives is submitted at the party headquarters in mid-October, seeking a special general convention and election of new leadership.
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#13181845
11 Jan 2026
Cadres of the Nepali Congress attend the opening ceremony of the special convention of the party organized in Kathmandu, Nepal, on January 11, 2026. The two-day event involves active participation from general secretaries Gagan Kumar Thapa and Bishwa Prakash Sharma. The acting party president and other senior party members abstain from the opening ceremony in protest. The second special general convention, called by Thapa and Sharma, takes place against the backdrop of a deepening intra-party dispute. The establishment faction, led by party president Sher Bahadur Deuba, opposes the convention, arguing it could split the party, and instead pushes for the regular general convention scheduled for May. Thapa and Sharma assert that the convention is demanded by 2,488 elected representatives, more than 54 percent of the total. Leaders supporting the convention state that over 60 percent of elected delegates participate. The Congress statute includes a provision that mandates the party leadership to call a special general convention if at least 40 percent of the party's elected general convention representatives demand it. A petition signed by 53 percent of the Nepali Congress general convention representatives is submitted at the party headquarters in mid-October, seeking a special general convention and election of new leadership.
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#13181846
11 Jan 2026
Cadres of the Nepali Congress attend the opening ceremony of the special convention of the party organized in Kathmandu, Nepal, on January 11, 2026. The two-day event involves active participation from general secretaries Gagan Kumar Thapa and Bishwa Prakash Sharma. The acting party president and other senior party members abstain from the opening ceremony in protest. The second special general convention, called by Thapa and Sharma, takes place against the backdrop of a deepening intra-party dispute. The establishment faction, led by party president Sher Bahadur Deuba, opposes the convention, arguing it could split the party, and instead pushes for the regular general convention scheduled for May. Thapa and Sharma assert that the convention is demanded by 2,488 elected representatives, more than 54 percent of the total. Leaders supporting the convention state that over 60 percent of elected delegates participate. The Congress statute includes a provision that mandates the party leadership to call a special general convention if at least 40 percent of the party's elected general convention representatives demand it. A petition signed by 53 percent of the Nepali Congress general convention representatives is submitted at the party headquarters in mid-October, seeking a special general convention and election of new leadership.
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#13181847
11 Jan 2026
Binod Chaudhary, Nepal's only billionaire, addresses the opening ceremony of the special convention of the Nepali Congress in Kathmandu, Nepal, on January 11, 2026. The two-day event is organized with the active involvement of general secretaries Gagan Kumar Thapa and Bishwa Prakash Sharma. The acting party president and other senior party members abstain from the opening ceremony, protesting against it. The second special general convention, called by Thapa and Sharma, is held against the backdrop of a deepening intra-party dispute. The establishment faction led by party president Sher Bahadur Deuba opposes the convention, arguing it could split the party, and instead pushes for the regular general convention scheduled for May. Thapa and Sharma maintain that the convention is demanded by 2,488 elected representatives, more than 54 percent of the total. Leaders backing the convention say over 60 percent of elected delegates participate. The Congress statute has a provision that makes it mandatory for the party leadership to call a special general convention if at least 40 percent of the party's elected general convention representatives demand it. A petition signed by 53 percent of the Nepali Congress general convention representatives is submitted at the party headquarters in mid-October, seeking a special general convention and election of a new leadership.
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#13181848
11 Jan 2026
Bishwa Prakash Sharma, General Secretary of the Nepali Congress, addresses the inaugural session of the special convention in Kathmandu, Nepal, on January 11, 2026. The two-day event is organized with the active involvement of General Secretaries Gagan Kumar Thapa and Bishwa Prakash Sharma. The acting party president and other senior party members abstain from the opening ceremony, protesting against it. The second special general convention, called by Thapa and Sharma, is held against the backdrop of a deepening intra-party dispute. The establishment faction, led by party president Sher Bahadur Deuba, opposes the convention, arguing it could split the party, and instead pushes for the regular general convention scheduled for May. Thapa and Sharma maintain that the convention is demanded by 2,488 elected representatives, more than 54 percent of the total. Leaders backing the convention say over 60 percent of elected delegates are participating. The Congress statute has a provision that makes it mandatory for the party leadership to call a special general convention if at least 40 percent of the party's elected general convention representatives demand it. A petition signed by 53 percent of the Nepali Congress general convention representatives is submitted at the party headquarters in mid-October, seeking a special general convention and election of a new leadership.
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