Jobbik calls on parties to back probe into Fidesz’s 2010 campaign spending

Change language:

Opposition Jobbik party has called on both the ruling and opposition parties to support setting up a parliamentary committee to look into ruling Fidesz’s spending during the 2010 election campaign.

Fidesz’s “constant sidestepping” of this question indicates that the party “committed electoral fraud” in 2010 and is “implementing not an illiberal but an illegitimate” system of government, Jobbik spokesman Ádám Mirkóczki told a press conference on Tuesday.

Mirkóczki called on Fidesz not to stand in the way of an investigation into the matter.

The spokesman was also asked about the situation of Jobbik MP Gergely Kulcsár, who had spit on the “Shoes on the riverbank” memorial honouring the memory of Holocaust victims killed on the banks of the Danube, in light of a recent interview Jobbik leader Gábor Vona gave to commercial television ATV in which he said he was ready to apologise to Hungary’s Jewish and Roma communities for “bad sentences” he and members of his party had said about them in the past. Mirkoczki said the party had taken “proportionate disciplinary action” against Kulcsar.

The spokesman said he himself would be willing to apologise if he ever misspoke or offended anyone.

Asked about whether he thought there was such a thing as “Gypsy crime” in Hungary, Mirkóczki said it was “undeniable” that there were certain criminal acts that were mostly perpetrated by Roma people. He said he did not insist on calling this phenomenon “Gypsy crime”, adding, however, that he had an interest in its elimination.

Continue reading

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *