Magyar, whose Tisza Party won a landslide election victory, claimed Szijjártó appeared at the ministry building where he and colleagues were destroying official papers. Magyar's centre-right Tisza party secured a two-thirds supermajority in Sunday's election, defeating Viktor Orbán after his 16-year rule. The victory promises to anchor Budapest in the EU mainstream after years of tensions with Brussels over democratic standards and the rule of law. In his first press conference after the election victory, Magyar said the document destruction contrasted sharply with normal government handovers in functioning democracies. The opposition leader criticized the lack of information sharing during the transition period. The election result came as a relief to Ukraine, as Orbán had maintained warm relations with Russia and blocked a 90-billion-euro loan for Kyiv. Magyar has promised to restore democratic standards and unblock European Union funds that were frozen due to rule of law concerns.