State Secretary: Anti-Semitism has been a tradition for the European left now for a decade
Zoltán Kovács said the spread of anti-Semitism should serve as yet another “strong argument” against illegal migration.
Zoltán Kovács said the spread of anti-Semitism should serve as yet another “strong argument” against illegal migration.
The Brussels-based Bruegel Institute has recently released an updated dataset summarizing European countries' responses to the energy crisis, which has sparked controversy in Hungary.
“The left-wing forced through its proposal concerning capital requirements which, if implemented, could make the currently stable banking sector more vulnerable in the European Union’s eastern and central European member...
Balázs Hidvéghi said the EP’s double standards are a “dead end and ruin European unity”.
There was “strong suspicion” that “MEPs of the dollar left-wing”, including Klára Dobrev and István Ujhelyi possibly maintained links with the primary defendant in the scandal.
“Common sense won, the dollar left-wing lost,” the MEPs said in a statement.
The prime minister said Hungary was the only country in Europe not to have had early elections since 1990, adding that “Hungary is first in terms of stability and predictability”.
I could go on about their slanderous reporting, but let’s focus on the single, most important point where there’s a grave misunderstanding: It’s not an option that Hungary doesn’t get a single penny from EU funds. That money is due to us.
Tamás Deutsch slammed opposition MEPs as “foreign-funded” representatives whose goal is “that Hungary doesn’t get a single penny from the EU”.