MEP Gyöngyösi: We will never support migration! – VIDEO
Sponsored content
Hungarian MEP Márton Gyöngyösi (Non-Attached Member of the European Parliament) shares his views on migration in a video.
“There is a growing consensus in the European Union that the community followed a wrong policy until the 2010s by promoting immigration and tolerating illegal migration.
By now, more and more people have realized, even among those who supported the policy back then, that it was a bad idea. Europe does not need unintegrable immigrants or illegal migrants who violate our laws by staying in our continent.
Europe needs a plannable future and reliable jobs. We must protect European families; we must protect the European way of life.
Unfortunately, there are others, such as the Fidesz government in Hungary, who only talk about controlling migration but in fact have already released thousands of convicted human traffickers from the prisons and want to bring half a million Asian guest workers of unknown backgrounds to Hungary.
As a Member of the European Parliament, my position has always been the same: you have to take the toughest measures against human traffickers; illegal migrants must be deported, and everybody in need must be given assistance in their own countries. Jobs must be secured for young Hungarian workers. I will never support illegal migration; I can promise you that.”
- read also: MEP Gyöngyösi calls on the EU to make steps towards defence union – VIDEO
Disclaimer: the sole liability for the opinions stated rests with the author(s). These opinions do not necessarily reflect the official position of the European Parliament.
please make a donation here
Hot news
Orbán cabinet sticks to economic neutrality, refuses to join blocks, finance minister Varga said
Trump appoints former PM Orbán advisor Gorka as his counter-terrorism chief but Orbán can’t be glad
Considerable financial support for Hungarians living in Ukraine, says Speaker Kövér
The big showdown: Is life better in Romania than Hungary?
Hungarian researchers’ new methodology for replacing GDP: the sustainability turnaround
Russia’s vision for Ukraine in 2045 might include Hungary – What’s the endgame for Moscow?