Orban panic? Risking the Elections

European elections are being described as a key moment for Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orban. Amid Hungarian fatigue from him, for the first time in many years, Orban's party risks losing significantly. Orban himself described these votes as historic as earlier addressing his sympathisers during the so-called “Peace Marriage” [...]
Amid Hungarian fatigue from him, for the first time in many years, Orban's party risks losing significantly. Orban himself described these votes as historic as addressing his former sympathisers during the so-called “Peace Marriage” in Budapest.
Our “country can stay out of the war only if Hungarian voters support the government. We have to win the European elections in such a way that Brussels bureaucratics, in fear of them, open to us the doors of that city and hastily leave their offices”, Obra said.
Take Brussels! No immigration, no gender problems, no war! In the recent parliamentary elections, his party Fidesz managed to secure two-thirds of the majority of parliament, and in the 2009 European elections, Fidesz managed to get more than 50%.
But this time things may be different, as the Hungarian prime minister faces an extremely serious opponent: Peter Magyar. The former husband of Orban's former justice minister, Judith Varga, was up until a few months ago unknown to the Hungarian public.
But since February of this year, the 43-year-old lawyer has managed to gain a sharp increase in the country's political scene, mobilizing tens of thousands of people on the streets against Orban, while with his conservative party Tisza, Respect and Freedom, has managed to get in polls from 25 to 30%, which is seen with great interest by political analysts describing this as a completely new situation, claiming that anyone gets out of nothing and gets such sudden support by fighting power, this never happened in Hungarian politics. ”












