Here is King Charles III’s message to Hungary on 20 August
His Majesty The King’s message to the President of Hungary, H.E. Dr Tamás Sulyok, on the occasion of the Hungarian National Day on the 20th of August:
❝As you and the people of Hungary celebrate the special occasion of your National Day, my wife and I have great pleasure in conveying our heartfelt congratulations to Your Excellency and the Hungarian people.
I value the bond between our nations, and hope that our countries can continue to work closely together on important global issues, whether they be peace and prosperity, or environment and climate change, which will benefit our future generations for years to come.
My wife and I would like to take this opportunity to send you and all Hungarians our warmest good wishes for the coming year.
Read also:
- What are we celebrating? – A guide to Hungary’s national days HERE
- PHOTO GALLERY, VIDEO: Spectacular Budapest fireworks in photos
LOVE the SUBTLENESS – the REMINDER that YOU Hungary belong to the West from King Charles 111.
Hungary – HUNGARIANS our FUTURE is with the West under DEMOCRACY.
I’m not sure he said anything like that. If anything, he avoided any comment that could be construed as even vaguely political, unlike the message from US Blinken. For such a greeting it’s probably best to keep the tone entirely neutral. King Charles fulfils an apolitical role in any case.
Hungary and UK have had a long relationship. The people of the UK understand Hungary’s stands on many topics. The difference between King Charles III and Prime Minister Starmer is King Charles contacted the families of the murdered girls and sympathized with their loss while Starmer sided with the migrant descendants of the murderer and other Muslim criminals.
PM Starmer did nothing of the sort. This is pure nonsense. His first responsibility as PM was to recover law and order which, as former Director of Public Prosecutions he had the correct experience to do. Justice was swift and the anarchists were bought to heel in short order after which peace returned. Many people in Hungary with political leanings of a certain kind were happy to see the UK burn and they’d have preferred to see the anarchy spread beyond the control of the government as it enabled them to propagate a narrative of a civil uprising taking place due to dissatisfaction with immigration when, in fact, the rioters were seeking a fun day out and had no cogent arguments to table. This is entirely different from legitimate concerns about immigration aired peacefully in a democratic forum.