France, April 26 -- Hungary's political landscape has been transformed by Tisza's election victory, which delivered the party a two-thirds majority and opened the door to a potential overhaul of the country's institutions.

One of the most interesting voices to assess that shift is Zsuzsanna Szelenyi, who was among the founding members of Fidesz in the late 1980s but broke with the party after Viktor Orban pushed it sharply to the right and concentrated power around himself.

She later returned to politics and co-founded the opposition Egyutt ("Together") party, a coalition of civil society groups, and is now director of the Democracy Institute at the Central European University in Budapest.

RFI: You were one of the early members of Fidesz...