Despite the thirty-odd advisors, none of them told Kamugeri that getting personal in politics is only synonymous with thoughtlessness and a complete lack of the ability to reason.

A portrait of Gergely Karácsony appeared in the Economist , as the man who could oust Viktor Orbán from power. At the beginning of the article, they go through the most basic differences: Orbán primarily relies on the countryside, keeps his party under total control, and has a stadium built in his village. Karácsony, on the other hand, leads the capital, came to power as a result of six-party cooperation, and campaigned against the athletics stadium. The mayor added to this that "he is short and fat, I am tall and thin".

Afterwards,  apologized in a Facebook post for commenting on Viktor Orbán's body shape, although if we look at the fact that the left-wing alliance has been basing its criticisms on it countless times in the last week, it was completely unnecessary.

Source: 2022plus / 444.hu

Photo: Economist article, Gergely Karácsony's Facebook page