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A vendor sorts media in a shelf with different daily newspapers, weeklies and magazines on display at a newsstand in a shopping mall in Budapest, Hungary, on June 17, 2026. The once popular tabloid Bors has been off the market since last week. The paper's publisher, Mediaworks, announced a reorganization of its portfolio, including the closure of some newspapers. The company is affiliated with the nationalist Fidesz, the former ruling party that was ousted from power in the April 2026 elections. Mediaworks is facing a loss of revenue after the new Tisza government led by Peter Magyar decided to no longer support Fidesz-friendly media with advertising. Before the election in April, then ruling party Fidesz is said to have directly or indirectly controlled about 80 percent of the media market in Hungary, while the press freedom of the few remaining independent media outlets was systematically obstructed by the government. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP via Getty Images)
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A Lebanese fisherman steers his boat near cargo ships off the coast of Beirut, as seen from the Dbayeh area north of the capital, on June 17, 2026. (Photo by Joseph EID / AFP via Getty Images)
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A woman stands on front of several daily newspapers, weeklies and magazines on display at a newsstand in a shopping mall in Budapest, Hungary, on June 17, 2026. The once popular tabloid Bors has been off the market since last week. The paper's publisher, Mediaworks, announced a reorganization of its portfolio, including the closure of some newspapers. The company is affiliated with the nationalist Fidesz, the former ruling party that was ousted from power in the April 2026 elections. Mediaworks is facing a loss of revenue after the new Tisza government led by Peter Magyar decided to no longer support Fidesz-friendly media with advertising. Before the election in April, then ruling party Fidesz is said to have directly or indirectly controlled about 80 percent of the media market in Hungary, while the press freedom of the few remaining independent media outlets was systematically obstructed by the government. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP via Getty Images)
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A woman walks past shelves with several daily newspapers, weeklies and magazines on display at a newsstand in a shopping mall in Budapest, Hungary, on June 17, 2026. The once popular tabloid Bors has been off the market since last week. The paper's publisher, Mediaworks, announced a reorganization of its portfolio, including the closure of some newspapers. The company is affiliated with the nationalist Fidesz, the former ruling party that was ousted from power in the April 2026 elections. Mediaworks is facing a loss of revenue after the new Tisza government led by Peter Magyar decided to no longer support Fidesz-friendly media with advertising. Before the election in April, then ruling party Fidesz is said to have directly or indirectly controlled about 80 percent of the media market in Hungary, while the press freedom of the few remaining independent media outlets was systematically obstructed by the government. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP via Getty Images)
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A woman stands on front of several daily newspapers, weeklies and magazines on display at a newsstand in a shopping mall in Budapest, Hungary, on June 17, 2026. The once popular tabloid Bors has been off the market since last week. The paper's publisher, Mediaworks, announced a reorganization of its portfolio, including the closure of some newspapers. The company is affiliated with the nationalist Fidesz, the former ruling party that was ousted from power in the April 2026 elections. Mediaworks is facing a loss of revenue after the new Tisza government led by Peter Magyar decided to no longer support Fidesz-friendly media with advertising. Before the election in April, then ruling party Fidesz is said to have directly or indirectly controlled about 80 percent of the media market in Hungary, while the press freedom of the few remaining independent media outlets was systematically obstructed by the government. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP via Getty Images)
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A man buys a daily newspaper in a newsstand at a shopping mall in Budapest, Hungary, on June 17, 2026. The once popular tabloid Bors has been off the market since last week. The paper's publisher, Mediaworks, announced a reorganization of its portfolio, including the closure of some newspapers. The company is affiliated with the nationalist Fidesz, the former ruling party that was ousted from power in the April 2026 elections. Mediaworks is facing a loss of revenue after the new Tisza government led by Peter Magyar decided to no longer support Fidesz-friendly media with advertising. Before the election in April, then ruling party Fidesz is said to have directly or indirectly controlled about 80 percent of the media market in Hungary, while the press freedom of the few remaining independent media outlets was systematically obstructed by the government. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP via Getty Images)
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A woman looks at a newsstand of daily newspapers, weeklies and magazines, at a shopping mall in Budapest on June 17, 2026. The once popular tabloid Bors has been off the market since last week. The paper's publisher, Mediaworks, announced a reorganization of its portfolio, including the closure of some newspapers. The company is affiliated with the nationalist Fidesz, the former ruling party that was ousted from power in the April elections. Mediaworks is facing a loss of revenue after the new Tisza government led by Peter Magyar decided to no longer support Fidesz-friendly media with advertising. Before the election in April, then ruling party Fidesz is said to have directly or indirectly controlled about 80 percent of the media market in Hungary, while the press freedom of the few remaining independent media outlets was systematically obstructed by the government. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP via Getty Images)
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Several daily newspapers, weeklies and magazines, among them Magyar Nemzet (front C), are seen on a newsstand at a shopping mall in Budapest on June 17, 2026. The once popular tabloid Bors has been off the market since last week. The paper's publisher, Mediaworks, announced a reorganization of its portfolio, including the closure of some newspapers. The company is affiliated with the nationalist Fidesz, the former ruling party that was ousted from power in the April elections. Mediaworks is facing a loss of revenue after the new Tisza government led by Peter Magyar decided to no longer support Fidesz-friendly media with advertising. Before the election in April, then ruling party Fidesz is said to have directly or indirectly controlled about 80 percent of the media market in Hungary, while the press freedom of the few remaining independent media outlets was systematically obstructed by the government. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP via Getty Images)




