International warrant issued against Hungarian politician

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A Budapest court has issued a European and international arrest warrant against former Jobbik MEP Béla Kovács, who has been sentenced to 5 years in prison for espionage and other crimes.

In September 2020, the court issued a first-instance verdict regarding four defendants who were accused by the prosecution of espionage against EU institutions and other crimes, the Budapest District Court said on its website on Wednesday.

Kovács was first found guilty as an accomplice for serial budget fraud and for using false documents, and was handed a suspended prison sentence of 1.5 years and a HUF 600,000 (EUR 1,617) fine.

Subsequently, the appellate court changed the first-instance ruling and declared the one-time opposition politician guilty of preparing to spy against European Union institutions. In September 2022, the sentence was further stiffened to a 5-year prison sentence and a 10-year ban from public life.

A Hungarian arrest warrant was issued in November 2022 when Kovács failed to appear to serve his sentence, and he is presumed to be abroad.

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MEP Gyöngyösi: Lay the foundations of conservatism in Hungary

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MEP Márton Gyöngyösi’s (Non-attached) thoughts via press release:

Every day, hundreds of media outlets report that Hungary has a right-wing government, and millions of people refer to Fidesz’ rule like that.  Quite wrongly! What is called “the right” in Hungary has no more to do with the original than grandma’s lemon tiramisu with the original Italian cake. (I apologize to the fans of the grandma version).

Every country has some political forces referred to as left and right. The name is similar but the content is quite different. In the Western world, right or right-wing is typically reserved for parties that generally represent the middle class, tend to be culturally conservative and believe in the free market principle when it comes to the economy. This school of thought has hardly had any representation in Hungary, and even when it did, it soon disappeared.

If you want to know why, we need to go back to the early 20th century. Just as the other Central European regions, Hungary had a delayed development of the middle class, and the process has never been completed, unfortunately. After the collapse of feudalism, a large part of the Hungarian society, let’s admit, never found its place in the new world.

Consequently, the right-conservative and the left-liberal thoughts showed up in a unique form from the beginning, with hardly any similarities to their western originals.

Hungarian liberalism ab ovo appeared as an inclusion body within an urban environment, and was infected with left-wing and even socialist ideas right from the start (no matter how strange that may sound to someone from the other parts of the world). In stark contrast with the original ideas of liberalism, it mostly wanted to copy the conditions of some western countries, regardless how realistic a goal it was.  What is typically called liberalism in Hungary is nothing but mere provincialism. The only ideological excitement Hungarian liberalism may offer to philosophers and historians is its marriage with the left, the connective tissue of which was their shared high-browed disdain for the Hungarian nation. In fact, Hungarian liberals and leftists disdain the nation to this day, due to their elitism and internationalism, respectively.

However, we don’t get much consolation from what has been named in Hungary as the right or conservatism, including the governing party Fidesz. 

This unique Hungarian “right” is not right at all. Perhaps it could be more accurately described as the common frustration of the people who were mentally unable to leave feudalism behind; a feeling which they try to vent by waving flags and having delirious dreams of the past. The “traditional Hungarian right” is actually the left which is painted with national colours and, just like the communists, tries to reach out to the lowest layers of the society. It has no other message than whatever is going on in Hungary is good as it is, and whatever happens in other places is bad. What Fidesz represents, and what is called “the right” in Hungary today, is not based on civic development or the middle class drive for learning and diligence. It is nothing but the self-justification and victim mentality of the former serfs, richly sprinkled with some egalitarian and leftist economic ideas (not to mention the anti-Semitic tropes)…

After all, what has conservative politics to do with Fidesz’ communist-inspired price caps, propaganda slogans designed for semi-illiterates or its increasingly anti-business and anti-middle class measures? Trying to answer this question, many Fidesz politicians would perhaps tell me that “the national flags are still waving”, conveniently forgetting how high the national banners were flying in Ceaușescu’s Romania, but it was a communist dictatorship nonetheless.

In 2023, we can state with complete certainty that the  ideologies defining Hungarian politics for a hundred years, i.e., left-liberalism and right-conservatism, have been utterly compromised.

Neither of them is able to address current issues, and neither can do anything but point fingers backwards. Neither wishes to face up to its mistakes. In fact, they make them virtues. They are incapable of anything other than rattling their swords along the completely artificial and pointless national vs. cosmopolitan fault line, while trying to win the sympathy of the masses through demagogic socialist promises. All normal people love their homeland and culture. To act against this, especially the way the Hungarian “left” does it, is stupid. To turn it into a political product, as the Fidesz universe does it, is compromising our nation and history.

What do we, Jobbik – Conservatives want? We want to build the real right in Hungary. We want an ideological community that does not equate patriotism with baseless chest-beating, but with how people enrich their society through learning and working.

We do not intend to represent the people who live on welfare, hold their hands out for benefits or see no other way to get a higher salary than the government raising the minimum wage. We want to represent the members of the hard-working middle class who are willing to start a business, create value through their work and ready to make things better for themselves. We believe in social responsibility and people’s need for self-organization; regardless if it is a political organization, a local patriotic society or a cultural association. We don’t want to rely on propaganda to make politics. Instead, we want to engage with people, talk and even debate with them, and we want to encourage them to do their best for their immediate environment or the progress of our nation.

We wish to do so by living rather than just preserving the Hungarian culture, by considering our faith to be the foundation for intellectual and spiritual growth instead of just pretending to have faith, because we believe that culture and faith are the connective tissues that hold a growing society together.

Our goal is not to represent everyone. Our goal is to reach out to the people willing to create, and organize them into a political community. This is what I and my party consider as the real right.

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.

Opposition: The Hungarian government is harming families with savings

MEP Gyöngyösi non-attached

The government should refrain from levying taxes on incomes from interests, since it would constitute an “almost unprecedented extraordinary tax on those saving money and self-sufficiency, the leader of Jobbik-Conservatives said on Friday.

Márton Gyöngyösi, who also sits in the European Parliament, accused the government of being “helpless in the face of the economic crisis and recession rooted mostly in the boundless spending ahead of the [2022] election and the inflation spike fuelled by the failed price caps system”.

The government should restore trust in Hungary by bolstering rather than taxing the classes that are ready and able to ensure self-sufficiency, Gyöngyösi said. Meanwhile, the price caps should specifically support those in difficulties, he added.

Meanwhile, governance by decree should be ended and tax cuts should bolster the working class, Gyöngyössi said.

Jobbik-Conservatives launches signature drive to demand ‘decent’ wages

jobbik

The opposition Jobbik-Conservatives party has launched a signature drive demanding “normal wages”, senior officials of the party told a press conference on Monday.

Jobbik-Conservatives Group leader György László Lukács said the aim was to “keep on the agenda at all forums” the necessity to raise wages in Hungary.

“Successive governments in the past three decades have … abandoned Hungarian workers and allowed highly qualified people to be employed with low wages and used the low level of wages to attract foreign investors to the country”, he said.

For the past 30 years, the wage gap between Hungary and the European average has “continually increased”, Lukács said, adding that “several countries that started from the same level as Hungary now have much higher average wages”.

Z. Dániel Kárpát, vice-president of Jobbik-Conservatives and member of parliament, said that his party rejects the “institutionalised scam” of the past three decades, which asked Hungarians to accept temporary austerity with the promise of a better life in the future, and instead promotes a programme of support for active Hungarian citizens who want to advance through their talents.

He added that their concept would not increase the burden on Hungarian micro, small and medium-sized enterprises, but would address the current situation with budget money – mainly from tax revenues, which have soared due to inflation – and a wage development fund created with EU funds.

In addition, he noted, they would like to renegotiate with the government the strategic agreements with the multinationals “so that Hungarian wages at least slowly converge with the EU average”.

Opposition Jobbik has other ideas than bringing guest workers to Hungary

Pakistani guest workers

Opposition Jobbik is calling for free retraining opportunities for Hungarian labourers instead of “organised imports of guest workers”, deputy leader Dániel Z Kárpát said on Friday.

The costs of training could be financed from an “inflation premium” of several hundreds of billions of forints “collected by the government after the brutally high prices paid by Hungarian families”, Kárpát said.

He also called for finding out the reasons why a portion of the population was inactive. If normal wages and fair working conditions were offered, some of them could also be involved in employment, he added.

The companies importing guest workers should instead focus on finding ways to motivate the economically inactive to enter the labour market, he said.

He said an earlier Jobbik proposal to offer non-refundable support to companies that employ at least 90 percent of workers from Hungary or the European Economic Area could improve the situation.

When in Hungary, Hungarian workers and Hungarian small businesses should come first, he said.

Jobbik calls for parliamentary debate day on ‘normal wages’

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The opposition Jobbik-Conservatives party has initiated a parliamentary debate day to be held on “normal wages” next Tuesday.

Jobbik plans to “make the Orban government face the way they are pushing our country into poverty”, the party said in a statement on Monday.

“The Orbán government’s economic policy is marked by record-high inflation in the EU, price caps making the life of retail owners impossible, and catastrophic wages are turning Hungary into the poorest country in Europe,” it said.

“It is not the EU hindering us from living better, but our own government, which is unacceptable,” the party said.

The government should take steps, as its policy based on cheap workforce didn’t pan out. Emigration has become so heavy that the workforce shortage can only be offset with guest workers from the east, Jobbik said.

Fully 86 percent of Hungarian consumers are cutting back on spending, according to an EY consultants survey conducted in January and February, details HERE.

Government-opposition talks start about the future of education

Teacher Class Education

Interior Minister Sándor Pintér has invited all parliamentary parties to a consultation on the new legislation on teachers’ career path, to be held on Wednesday.

The consultation will come after three months of “comprehensive consultation with professional organisations and society” on the matter, a foundation of teachers’ “significant wage increases”, the interior ministry said in a statement on Friday. Pinter invited representatives of Fidesz-Christian Democrats (KDNP), the Democratic Coalition (DK), the Socialists, Momentum, Jobbik and Mi Hazánk (Our Homeland), it said.

The ministry hopes that “leftist parties are willing to engage in calm, constructive dialogue rather than fueling demonstrations often ending in violence, and working openly to obstruct the payment of the EU monies that would fund wage hikes,” the statement added. The ministry has adopted the proposals of trade unions, the National Teachers’ Council and other professional and civil organisation on dozens of points in the past months. Until Hungary receives the European Union funding “the country is entitled to”, the government will raise teachers’ wages by 10 percent, starting in January. Once the resources are accessible, teachers could see the “largest wage hike since the change of regime”, which would bring their average wages above 800,000 forints (EUR 2,100) a month by 2026, the statement said.

The amendment would also simplify teachers’ career path, establish a performance evaluation system and a change in their employment status. Their administrative burdens would decrease, it said.

Hungarian governing party continues to criticise the US ambassador

pressman

The EP group of ruling Fidesz strongly condemns the invitation of opposition Jobbik leader and MEP Márton Gyöngyösi to a Passover dinner by the US ambassador to Hungary, group leader Tamás Deutsch said in a letter sent to fellow EP representatives.

In his letter, Deutsch called Gyöngyösi’s invitation to the Jewish Passover Seder hosted by David Pressman a “tasteless provocation” and “a shocking diplomatic and public scandal”, according to a statement sent to MTI by the Fidesz group on Monday.

Deutsch said that Gyöngyösi “as a representative of the far-right Jobbik party, had made an unprecedented anti-Semitic statement in the Hungarian parliament” and later “as Jobbik vice-president, participated as an observer in the illegal pro-Putin referendum in the separatist provinces of south-eastern Ukraine, in Donetsk, which was unanimously condemned by Western countries”.

“David Pressman’s insensitivity reveals that the US ambassador in Budapest is so biased against the Hungarian government that neither the Jobbik leader’s anti-Semitism, nor his active pro-Putin stance, nor the sensitivity of the Jewish community in Hungary, prevent him from seating Márton Gyöngyösi at the table with Jewish leaders on a Jewish holiday,” he said.

Deutsch said that the ambassador’s “behaviour is even more incomprehensible given that the ambassadors of the United States of America are treated with the highest respect in Hungary and are regarded by the government and the governing parties as representatives of one of the country’s most important allies”.

He said that “Pressman’s blunder is compounded by the fact that Márton Gyöngyösi was the only politician present at the dinner, which means that by inviting him he gave a kind of privileged status to the anti-Semitic party leader, at the same time legitimizing the anti-Semitic manifestations of Jobbik and Gyöngyösi.

He said that the group considers “Pressman’s behaviour to be distasteful and seriously provocative, and we place it among the actions of the US Democratic administration, which, despite our alliance, is increasingly openly attacking our conservative Christian-democratic government’s anti-war position as well as its prioritisation of Hungarian national interests”.

Deutsch said that “the Jewish denominations in Hungary united in condemning Ambassador Pressman’s blatant gesture, which demonstrates his total political blindness, and confirmed their disassociation from the Jobbik- Konzervativok party and its representatives”.

“In line with our political position of rejecting any attempt at external intervention in the European Union, we condemn Pressman’s tasteless provocation in the strongest terms,” he said.

We already published an article, where MEP Gyöngyösi about the Seder dinner at the US Embassy in Pesach

Hungarian opposition: Hungary is a bad ally

Koloman Brenner Jobbik

Hungary’s government “is visibly behaving like a bad ally to both NATO and European Union member states”, the opposition Jobbik party’s deputy parliamentary group leader said on Thursday.

Reacting to the US ambassador’s announcement of sanctions against the Budapest-based International Investment Bank (IIB) and a number of its executives on Wednesday, Koloman Brenner told a press conference that the decision showed that “the United States of America is also turning its back on Viktor Orbán’s government”.

Brenner said the Hungarian government “has not been this isolated” since before the WWI Trianon Peace Treaty, “and that, too, led to a national tragedy”.

Hungary must stand by its Euro-Atlantic allies, he said.

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Referring to the war in Ukraine, Brenner said Hungary “can’t side with the losers again in this globally historic conflict like it has unfortunately done so many times over the course of our history”.

Europe and the world need a “just peace”, with the first step being a Russian withdrawal from Ukraine, he said.

Brenner accused Prime Minister Viktor Orban and ruling Fidesz of having “sided with the Russians”, insisting that they “want the peace of November 4, 1956”, referring to the crushing of the 1956 revolution.

MEP Gyöngyösi about the Seder dinner at the US Embassy in Pesach

Márton Gyöngyösi Jobbik

András Heisler, President of the Mazsihisz, would like an apology from MEP Márton Gyöngyösi for his statements in 2012. At the seder dinner hosted by US Ambassador David Pressman, Heisler told Gyöngyössi that his name had a bad ring in Jewish circles, but also indicated that they saw the party’s change as a good direction.

In response, the Jobbik chairman said that he had apologised on the next day of his speech, and several times since then. He wrote on Wednesday on Facebook:

The Passover is a celebration of the birth of freedom as well as the birth of the Jewish people.

Let me thank the US Ambassador once again for inviting me to this celebration. Let me thank the Hungarian and foreign, Jewish and non-Jewish people who sat for this event with me at the table. It was great to talk about fundamental human values and desires such as freedom, for example. I learned a lot.

For me, one of the highlights of the evening was when a member of the company stepped up to me and said: In the third century, the famous wise Rabbi Shimon ben Lakish taught that “when a person turns himself around, regrets his past and does good, that is such a powerful act that his sins become merits.” I knew what he meant.

I knew he was addressing me. I answered: “I would like to do as much for the peace and safety of Hungarian Jews and Hungary in general that it could make us forget the bad and misguided sentences I said earlier.” Even back then, I did not want to offend anybody, especially our Jewish compatriots.

I disown those statements of mine and I apologize for them again now.

Freedom was taken away from us by the current government in Hungary, so every celebration that focuses on regaining freedom, including the Passover, is extremely important for all of us. Jews and Christians, too. We know we have to fight for it, and we also know we are not alone in this fight. The Eternal God was with the people of Israel, and he delivered them from the Egyptian bondage. So deliverance is always God’s work. That’s what the Passover Seder dinner reminded us.

Let’s fight together for a free Hungary. I will do my share.

Jobbik: Poor quality Ukrainian grain floods Hungary

harvest tractor agriculture grain

Opposition Jobbik has urged the government to protect Hungarian farmers from the impact of an influx of “poor quality Ukrainian grain”.

At a press conference, Jobbik MP János Bencze repeated his party’s call on the government to release the names of the companies importing large quantities of Ukrainian grain and to impose a tax on their extra profits which could be used to pay compensations to farmers. Bencze said the large volumes of grain coming out of Ukraine was causing serious problems in neighbouring countries, including Hungary. He said the grain, which was often treated with chemicals banned in the European Union, had depressed grain prices in Hungary, “putting local farmers in a terribly hopeless situation”, MTI wrote.

He noted that Poland’s minister of agriculture had recently resigned because the compensation the country received from the EU had not been enough to protect local farmers from the impact of Ukrainian grain imports. Bencze said Hungary’s agriculture minister should also step down if he could not bring a stop to the influx of poor-quality Ukrainian grain.

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Is this the Hungarian reality? Fidesz would win 3/4 party majority in election

Orbán and Giorgia Meloni Italy Hungary

The ruling alliance of Fidesz and the Christian Democrats would win a 3/4 majority in parliament if elections were held this Sunday, according to a fresh poll by the pro-government Nézőpont Institute.

Among decided voters, Fidesz-KDNP’s list would capture 51 percent of the vote in a general election, Nézőpont said in statement, noting that the poll’s margin of error meant this could be considered identical to the 52 percent won by the ruling parties in 2022.

A united opposition would receive 26 percent of the vote, 10 percent less than in 2022, Nézőpont said.

The radical opposition Mi Hazánk would garner 12 percent of the vote, doubling its share from 2022. The satirical Two-Tailed Dog Party would receive 8 percent, clearing the 5 percent threshold to enter parliament.

Fidesz-KDNP’s votes would translate into 148 seats in Hungary’s 199-seat parliament, up from the current 135.

The left-wing opposition (DK, Jobbik, Momentum, LMP, MSZP) would have 30 seats, 27 less than their current 57. Meanwhile, Mi Hazánk would double its number of MPs with 12 seats, making it the largest opposition group.

The Two-Tailed Dog Party would have 8 seats.

Nézőpont’s phone poll was carried out between March 27 and 29 with a sample of 1,000 adults.

We already published a poll by IDEA, details HERE.

Fidesz would win by an even greater percentage now than a year ago

Hungary Kossuth Square parliament 2023

Fidesz would win an even bigger victory than it did a year ago with the same support (52 percent) if parliamentary elections were held on Sunday, as the combined opposition (30 percent) would perform even worse, according to the results of a survey by think tank Társadalomkutató, sent to MTI on Thursday.

The survey, conducted between March 27 and 29 by interviewing 1,000 people by phone, shows that, one year on, the governing parties still enjoy the support of every other voter and would be able to repeat their victory in the 2022 election.

Support for the opposition parties of the former left-wing alliance, which won 36 percent of domestic votes in 2022, has dwindled further, to 30 percent in the survey, the analysts added.

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The parties of the alliance show a mixed picture: strongest among them is the Democratic Coalition, with 12 percent of voter support, followed by Momentum with 6 percent and Jobbik with 4 percent. They are followed by LMP with 3 percent, the Socialist Party with 2 percent and Párbeszéd with 1 percent, all falling short of the support necessary for entering parliament. Péter Márky-Zay’s Everybody’s Hungary People’s Party, which has officially become a political party since the 2022 election, only enjoyed the support of 2 percent of those interviewed in the survey.

Voters who left the former left-wing alliance presumably back other parties now: the Hungarian Two-tailed Dog Party, with its current support of 10 percent, would clearly cross the threshold for parliamentary entry.

The radical right-wing Mi Hazánk party has further improved its 6 percent election result; if elections were held on Sunday, 8 percent of voters would back them, according to the survey.

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New poll shows how the Hungarian governing party and the opposition stand

Hungary Kossuth Square parliament 2023

Public support for ruling Fidesz among voting age adults has not changed and stands at 29 percent, according to a survey conducted by the IDEA institute in early March, the weekly 168 ora reported on Monday.

Support for Fidesz among people with clear-cut party preferences was gauged at 48 percent, the report said, adding that

“Fidesz’s dominant position is not endangered by any of the opposition parties”.

Concerning the opposition, the pollster said that if the general elections were held now, the Democratic Coalition (DK) would garner 12 percent of the votes, Mi Hazánk 6 percent, and Momentum 5 percent, clearing the parliamentary threshold.

All other parliamentary parties — LMP, Jobbik, the Socialist Party, and Párbeszád — would garner one percent each, and the satyrical non-parliamentary Two-tailed Dog four percent, and would not make it to parliament.

The ratio of voters without a party preference was gauged at 38 percent, 2 percentage points higher than earlier.

The survey was conducted on Facebook between March 25 and February 16 on a representative sample.

 

PHOTOS: Another Hungarian opposition party changes name

Párbeszéd party congress

The opposition Párbeszéd will change its name to Párbeszéd-Greens and Benedek Jávor will head the party’s list at the European Parliamentary elections, its co-leaders said on Sunday announcing decisions made at a party congress on the previous day.

Bence Tordai said at an event dubbed “Go for 2024! – With Párbeszéd (Dialogue) for a Green Hungary” that green politics required the understanding of what sustainability meant and a realisation that there were problems with the basic logic, approach and operation of the current system.

Rebeka Szabó said green politics went beyond trying to improve environmental protection in the current regime but involved a critique of the regime. She said the party was not only critical of the “hybrid local regime built on stealing public monies” but it was also critical of a global capitalist regime that put profit above the people’s security and children’ future.

Tordai said a green Europe and green Hungary had to be built where green solutions are promoted and green principles are enforced on all levels of decision making, including locally, on national level and throughout the EU. Budapest Mayor Gergely Karácsony, addressing the event’s local municipality section, said that cities must play a leading role in slowing down climate change.

Párbeszéd is the third Hungarian opposition party that changed its name after the lost 2022 April general elections. LMP was the first one changing its name to LMP- Hungarian Green Party, Jobbik followed as Jobbik-Conservatives.

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Opposition Jobbik lost against Hungarian public media

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Opposition Jobbik has lost a lawsuit against Hungarian public media, MTVA’s press and marketing office said in a statement on Friday.

The Kúria, Hungary’s supreme court, has ruled in a binding decision that Hungarian news agency MTI’s national press release service (OS) had the right to refuse publication of a statement released by Jobbik, MTVA said. The Kúria’s ruling confirmed once again that the OS service has the right to refuse to publish any statement that may breach the privacy rights of an individual, and that MTI was entitled to editorial freedom, the statement said.

According to the court’s ruling, provisions of the Act on Media Services and Mass Communication related to the national news agency do not guarantee anyone carte-blanche to demand publication of a specific statement via its OS service. MTVA’s statement noted that the opposition Democratic Coalition has lost seven lawsuits against Hungarian public media in connection with the way MTI handled press releases. Under the Kúria’s most recent decision, Jobbik must pay the full legal costs to the defendant, Duna Médiaszolgáltató Nonprofit Zrt.

Hungarian opposition: Goals today same as in 1848

Gyöngyösi Márton

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MEP Márton Gyöngyösi (non-attached) and party leader Jobbik – Conservatives marked the national holiday at an event in Budapest, stating that there were similarities between Hungary’s situation 175 years ago and today, and the goal is that the country should not fall out of the group of European nations but develop together with them.

He told the event at the Batthyany Eternal Flame monument near Parliament that Hungary always belonged to the western side of the Europe culturally, and the majority of Hungarians agreed that it should not fall out from “the bloodstream of the continent”.

He said that over recent centuries, Russian weapons were most often involved in “trampling Hungary’s freedom”.

“The current regime in power openly goes against Europe and cosies up to Russia instead,” he said. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s goal is clear: “he wants to lead Hungary out of Europe and move our country to Russia’s sphere of interest,” he added.

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.

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Jobbik would introduce new food subsidy scheme in Hungary

Jobbik Hungary food

Opposition Jobbik will contest the 2024 European parliamentary elections on its own and favours fielding local patriots in the local elections without opposition party logos, leaders of the conservative party said on Friday.

Jobbik will contest the EP elections with its own platform and as a modern centre-right pro-Europe party, Márton Gyöngyösi, the party’s leader, told a press event. As regards the local elections, he said a recent mayoral by-election in Jászberény, in eastern Hungary, showed that the vote should be contested without the presence of party logos. He said it was better if the opposition parties “step back and let people who are considered credible locally” decide amongst themselves who should go up against ruling Fidesz’s candidate.

However, Jobbik does not rule out the possibility of holding primaries in places where there may be disagreements, Gyöngyösi said, adding that “this would have to happen locally”.

Anita Kőrösi Potocskáné, Jobbik’s deputy leader, said opposition cooperation in the past had proven successful in places where the parties themselves were absent. She said party logos should not feature on the county election lists, either, arguing that civil groups could be more successful there as well.

Kőrösi Potocskáné added, however, that a primary to determine the candidate for Budapest mayor was likely inevitable, vowing that Jobbik would support the winner.

Meanwhile, Gyöngyösi said Jobbik favoured phasing out price caps on basic foodstuffs and replacing them with a food subsidy scheme targeting those having trouble making ends meet. The scheme would be financed from the additional gains in VAT revenue due to inflation, he said.

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Read alsoA Hungarian party changed its name – here is the new