< Back to 68k.news DK front page

Thousands protest against Hungary's Orbán in ruling party stronghold

Original source (on modern site) | Article images: [1] [2] [3]

  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Politics
  4. Elections
  5. Thousands protest against Hungary's Orbán in ruling party stronghold

Content-Type:

News Service Produced externally by an organization we trust to adhere to journalistic standards.

Péter Magyar, a former government insider seen by some observers as the first serious threat in years to Orbán, staged the rally attended by around 10,000 people in the eastern town of Debrecen, a stronghold of the ruling Fidesz party. [@SzabadonMagyar on X, formerly Twitter]

Thousands of Hungarians protested against nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orbán at a rally on Sunday (5 May) weeks ahead of European Parliament and local elections due in early June.

Péter Magyar, a former government insider seen by some observers as the first serious threat in years to Orbán, staged the rally attended by around 10,000 people in the eastern town of Debrecen, a stronghold of the ruling Fidesz party.

Hungarians scandals: " Resign!" in Debrecen, Hungary.

Debrecen is considered to be the stronghold of the governing party (FIDESZ)

Hungarians in every corner of the country had enough of the Orban-regime pic.twitter.com/3eKX4fNhL5

— SzabadonMagyarul 🇬🇧🇭🇺🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@SzabadonMagyar) May 5, 2024

Fidesz candidates have carried the town since the late 1990s with the ruling party winning about 60% of the vote at the last election compared with around a third for opposition parties.

Addressing flag-waving supporters, Magyar took aim at one of Orbán's core policies, criticising what he called the extremely low level of child support allowances in Hungary.

"If you tell this story anywhere in Europe, no one is going to believe you," Magyar said.

Orbán says that among EU countries Hungary is spending the largest share of its economy on supporting families.

"We need an entirely new system where social support is indeed targeted based on social needs," Magyar said.

He said Hungary was ruled by what he called a well-connected elite, which he would seek to end if elected.

International watchdogs say Orbán has channelled European Union funds to businessmen close to Fidesz to entrench himself in power. Orbán says Hungary is no more corrupt than other countries.

The watchdog tasked with overseeing EU funds says it lacks the proper authority to expose possible wrongdoing and has called for additional powers.

Read more with Euractiv

Subscribe now to our newsletter EU Elections Decoded

< Back to 68k.news DK front page