As Hungary approaches its upcoming Parliamentary elections on April 12, the country’s two major political parties — FIDESZ, the incumbent, led by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán; and the opposition TISZA, led by former FIDESZ party member Péter Magyar — which are going up against each other, have started their campaigns in earnest. Citizens of the Central European country are seeing election messages not only on the streets, but online as well. As the BBC reported on April 1, just 11 days before the scheduled election date, FIDESZ — at 35 percent — was far behind TISZA’s 58 percent in the popularity polls.
Magyar emerged as Orban’s strongest opposition when, in February 2024, he appeared live on the pro-opposition YouTube channel Partizán, criticised his own party and spoke of his hope for political change, noting it would be very difficult while Orban was still in power. The video went viral. The very next month, Magyar launched TISZA as an opposition party to FIDESZ, which has led the nation for the past 16 years.
The Orbán regime, as it has been called, has been employing an “us versus them” political philosophy, a tactic being used even more prominently as voting day draws nearer.
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Check out false flag operation between Orban and our beloved Serbian emperor 😂
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As Hungary approaches its upcoming Parliamentary elections on April 12, the country’s two major political parties — FIDESZ, the incumbent, led by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán; and the opposition TISZA, led by former FIDESZ party member Péter Magyar — which are going up against each other, have started their campaigns in earnest. Citizens of the Central European country are seeing election messages not only on the streets, but online as well. As the BBC reported on April 1, just 11 days before the scheduled election date, FIDESZ — at 35 percent — was far behind TISZA’s 58 percent in the popularity polls.
Magyar emerged as Orban’s strongest opposition when, in February 2024, he appeared live on the pro-opposition YouTube channel Partizán, criticised his own party and spoke of his hope for political change, noting it would be very difficult while Orban was still in power. The video went viral. The very next month, Magyar launched TISZA as an opposition party to FIDESZ, which has led the nation for the past 16 years.
The Orbán regime, as it has been called, has been employing an “us versus them” political philosophy, a tactic being used even more prominently as voting day draws nearer.
Check out false flag operation between Orban and our beloved Serbian emperor 😂