World Democracy Monitor — 30 March 2026

Tisza leads Fidesz by 23 points with 13 days to Hungary's April 12 election; Georgia's new March 2026 law package completes its civil society capture architecture; and the Philippines enters the heatmap as a new Rapid Decay entry after CIVICUS adds it to its Watchlist at Repressed rating.

The week of 30 March 2026 adds two new heatmap entries, advances major legislative developments, and tightens several existing cases. Ten items.

1. HUNGARY ENTERS FINAL 13 DAYS WITH TISZA 23 POINTS AHEAD. Medián poll (Reuters, March 25): opposition Tisza leads Fidesz by 23 percentage points among decided voters — the widest documented gap of the campaign. The structural constraint remains: electoral redistricting means Tisza must win the national vote by 3–5 points to achieve a parliamentary majority. ODIHR observation mission is deployed. IPI: independent journalists from HVG and Telex continue to be excluded from Fidesz campaign events while other outlets have free access. Severity: 5.0→. The April 12 result will be this monitor’s most significant data point since launch — a Fidesz defeat would be the first in 16 years and would test whether the full three-phase media capture playbook can withstand a genuinely competitive election.

2. GEORGIA’S MARCH 2026 LAWS COMPLETE THE CAPTURE ARCHITECTURE. CIVICUS March Watchlist confirms Georgia downgraded to ‘Repressed’. New legislation passed in the same week as Kobakhidze’s CPAC Hungary keynote: (a) expanded ‘foreign grants’ definition — any funding from abroad deemed to ’exert influence’ requires prior government approval with six-year criminal penalty; (b) ’extremism against constitutional order’ law — imprisonment for creating ’the perception’ that Georgian authorities are illegitimate; (c) 8-year political party ban for anyone previously employed by foreign-funded civil society. FIDH called for repeal (March 18). An alliance of nine opposition parties formed March 2026 — Kobakhidze immediately announced the banning lawsuit could be expanded to encompass all of them. Severity: 8.5↑ — now the third most severe case in the monitor.

3. PHILIPPINES ENTERS THE HEATMAP AS A NEW RAPID DECAY ENTRY. CIVICUS added the Philippines to its March 2026 Watchlist (March 25) at ‘Repressed’ rating. Journalists Frenchie Mae Cumpio and Marielle Domequil convicted on terrorism-financing charges in January 2026 after six years of pre-trial detention. DOJ charged 97 anti-corruption protesters with sedition under the Cybercrime Prevention Act (November 2025). Philippines enters at severity 5.5↑ — same initial score as the United States. The Counter-Terrorism Act 2020 is being used as the primary lawfare instrument, following the same pretextual architecture documented in El Salvador, Ecuador, and Nicaragua.

4. THE SAVE AMERICA ACT SUITE ESCALATES US ELECTORAL ENGINEERING. The SAVE America Act passed the House in February 2026 — more restrictive than the original SAVE Act (passed April 2025). New additions: documentation requirements at polling places on election day; mandatory submission of all 50 state voter rolls to DHS with no restrictions on data use. The MEGA Act (January 2026) would ban universal mail voting entirely. Campaign Legal Center: 21 million Americans lack the required documents. Three bills advancing incrementally toward the November 2026 midterms — each iteration more restrictive.

5. TRUMP’S SYSTEMATIC CAMPAIGN AGAINST FEDERAL JUDICIAL REVIEW. Reuters analysis (March 7): 97% of Trump’s 31 Supreme Court emergency requests since February 2025 argue that federal judges are ‘interfering with presidential power’ — compared to 26% under Biden. This week Trump called his own appointees Gorsuch and Barrett ’lapdogs’ and ‘disgrace’ for ruling against his tariff interpretation. The campaign is specifically designed to narrow the scope of judicial review — making it structurally harder for courts to function as an executive check regardless of individual rulings. SCOTUS hears birthright citizenship April 1.

6. EPP–FAR-RIGHT FIREWALL BREAKING DOWN IN EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT. DW analysis (March 18): European People’s Party coordinated with Patriots for Europe and ECR on migration policy votes including ‘return hubs’ (deportation facilities outside EU) — prior discussions, consensus on phrasing, and coordinated majorities documented. FEPS researcher: cooperation ’no longer taboo, occurring with increasing frequency.’ This has direct implications for the Hungary election: if Tisza wins and Hungary shifts from Patriots for Europe to EPP, it changes the EP majority calculus across all policy areas.

7. BENIN ENTERS ELECTORAL WATCH — APRIL 12 HIGH-RISK ELECTION. CIVICUS March 2026 Watchlist adds Benin ahead of its April 12 presidential election — coinciding with Hungary’s April 12 vote, giving the monitor two simultaneous high-risk elections on the same day. Journalists arrested, media outlets suspended. Atlantic Council (March 16): weakening democratic checks and regional insecurity. A rare case where electoral risk and regional security risk are compounding simultaneously.

8. ECUADOR CONFIRMS THE ANTI-NGO WAVE’S ENFORCEMENT PHASE. CIVICUS March Watchlist documents Ecuador’s Social Transparency Law (August 2025) actively used to freeze accounts of 27+ civil society and Indigenous organisations — confirming the Amnesty International March 23 report was not describing potential harm but actual, ongoing enforcement. Pachamama Foundation, CONAIE, Yasunidos all targeted. The transition from law-on-paper to law-in-enforcement is the critical phase shift that the Legislative Watch is designed to track. Ecuador provides real-time data on how fast anti-NGO legislation becomes operational suppression.

9. SEVERITY GRADIENT UPDATE — TWO NEW ENTRIES, ONE ESCALATION. This week: Georgia escalates from 8.0↑ to 8.5↑ (new March laws), now the third most severe case after Iran (10.0→) and Nicaragua (9.5→). Philippines enters at 5.5↑ — borderline territory alongside the United States (5.5↑) and Hungary (5.0→). The Watch List borderline cases (India 5.0→, Bangladesh 4.5↑) are unchanged this week but the addition of Philippines at the same threshold level suggests the 5.0–5.5 band is becoming the monitor’s most populated severity zone — countries that have functioning resilience mechanisms but accelerating decay trajectories.

10. RECOVERY TIER HOLDS — VENEZUELA REMAINS THE CRITICAL FRICTION CASE. South Korea, Romania, Bolivia, and Poland maintain Recovery status this week — no new evidence of reversal. Venezuela remains at 7.0↑ within Recovery — the most precarious designation in the monitor. The friction note has been updated: BBC (February 21) confirms 1,557 applications received but Foro Penal confirmed only 448 released, and the amnesty law explicitly excludes those who ‘advocated for foreign military intervention’ — a provision that may exclude key opposition figures in exile. The gap between official claims and confirmed releases is widening, not narrowing.


Full interactive dashboard: World Democracy Monitor dashboard