Busted: Intelligence report uncovers HUF 3 bn in foreign support behind united opposition campaign
The truth is finally out, and it’s shaping up to become Hungary’s biggest campaign-financing scandal since the fall of communism.
The truth is finally out, and it’s shaping up to become Hungary’s biggest campaign-financing scandal since the fall of communism.
Left-wing campaign center operators spammed around a million people in the biggest and most widespread election fraud since the fall of communism, according to a report.
A closer look at the supporters behind Péter Márki-Zay’s campaign reveals an Austrian company close to the circles of former prime minister Gordon Bajnai, where one of the owners has...
A survey by Századvég has found that committed voters who would prefer Viktor Orbán as prime minister outweigh those who back Péter Márki-Zay by almost 2:1.
A Századvég Foundation poll found that the popularity of Péter Márki-Zay has fallen further, with 68 percent of respondents seeing him unfavorably.
State Secretary Zoltán Kovács said no Hungarian military plane is involved in delivering weapons to Ukraine.
Századvég said the fall was likely due to “recent remarks by Márki-Zay in which he set aside generally accepted staples of political culture, made statements that offended certain groups of voters and supported very unpopular proposals”.
A survey by the Nézőpont Institute has found that even the majority of left-wing voters disagree with statements by Péter Márki-Zay regarding the government’s utility price cap and his ideas on healthcare reform.
Péter Márki-Zay, the opposition’s candidate for PM in the April elections, made some odd and unfortunate remarks the other day.
In a recent Századvég Foundation poll, 36 percent of respondents had a favorable opinion of the mayor of Hódmezővásárhely and 56 percent expressed a negative view.
The Nézőpont survey found that of the 42 percent of left-wing decided voters, only 24 percent back the mayor of Hódmezővásárhely.
And campaign as if the European Parliament and the rest of the Brussels machine are far more important than the Hungarian voter.
PM Orbán was preferred by 51 percent of respondents to Péter Márki-Zay whom 41 percent would like to see at the helm of the next government.