Former PM Gyurcsány: Opposition either wins together or not at all
Ferenc Gyurcsány, the leader of the Democratic Coalition, has called on Hungary’s opposition parties to join forces, saying: “Either we’ll win together or we won’t win at all”.
In his annual speech on Sunday, the former Socialist prime minister said the opposition parties came from many different backgrounds, with different pasts and political tastes. “They don’t have to love each other, but they should love the homeland,” he said.
Read alsoThe Economist discusses the plight of Hungary’s opposition
Gyurcsány said the opposition parties should not ignore their constituents. If they did win the 2022 general election, he added, they would be able to form a government only by joining together.
“It’s far better for a country to have a coalition government forced to compromise than an ignominious, selfish single party of the state,” he said.
Gyurcsány said a coalition government’s duty went far beyond linking together party lists. “Those who can’t stand each other while campaigning are hardly going to stand each other in government,” he said, adding that unless there was “an understanding that the opposition is diverse, there will not be an acceptance that the country needs greater diversity and understanding”.
Gyurcsány praised the Socialist Party for its efforts to help the disadvantaged. He also welcomed the Jobbik party’s efforts to turn itself into a “decent, nationalist, conservative party” after its “awful past”.
Read alsoOpposition parties protest against criminal proceedings against DK deputy leader
He said the Momentum Movement’s members were “young, dynamic and sometimes cheeky, but have introduced a new generation of hundreds of thousands to politics.” Gyurcsány also noted that the Greens, formerly known as LMP, had filed a criminal complaint against him a few years ago. “But this doesn’t matter.”
“There’s no middle way between an authoritarian, populist, nationalist, anti-European world and democrats,” he said.
Gyurcsány also welcomed the election of Gergely Karácsony as Budapest’s mayor.
The leftist leader warned that a win by the opposition in 2022 would be followed by a “hideous” period in which they would be “hounded relentlessly”.
Meanwhile, referring to fellow DK politician Péter Niedermüller, the mayor of Budapest’s 7th district, who recently caused outrage with a remark about “white, Christian, heterosexual men and women”, Gyurcsány said Niedermüller should have added that “it is not enough to be white, heterosexual and Christian in present-day Hungary,” since “you also have to be Fidesz”.
The ruling Fidesz party’s director of communications, István Hollik, said in response that Gyurcsány had made it clear in his annual speech that he was the real leader of the liberal opposition.
Gyurcsány, he added, had “ruined the country” but had done “very well for himself”.
Hollik added that while hundreds of thousands had sunk into poverty and lost their jobs, Gyurcsány had been earning billions through “the privatisation robbery”. “Let’s not forget who Ferenc Gyurcsány actually is,” he added.
Source: MTI
please make a donation here
Hot news
Border controls to disappear between Hungary and Romania: Key steps towards Schengen have been taken
Hungarian government implements two-year moratorium on Airbnb in Budapest to address housing crisis
Hungary’s income decline: 8 in 10 citizens fall behind European peers
Top 3 in the region: Corvinus University gains prestigious recognition
Opposition Tisza: Fidesz-DK grand coalition formed in the EP
The Notching Process: essential techniques & applications