According to a survey by the Fundamental Rights Center, two-thirds of the population do not want Gergely Karácsony as prime minister.
According to the research, the relative majority of the majority of voting age think that the primary election itself is not about the real competition.
According to 42 percent of Hungarian adults, the final result of the left-wing primary election could be announced in advance, and only 30 percent of the respondents said that it was a real competition, according to the current opinion poll of the Center for Fundamental Rights.
Based on the research representing the opinion of the adult Hungarian population over the age of 18, it can be stated that the credibility of the casting of prime ministerial candidates, which starts at the end of September, with the participation of left-wing parties, has serious problems. According to the relative majority of the majority of voting age (42 percent), it is already apparent that it is not a real competition, but more of a background bargain between the party leaders. Overall, it can be said that the influence of Ferenc Gyurcsány is known to the voters. This perception is undoubtedly strengthened by the fact that in recent weeks, the various left-wing parties have stepped back their candidates in favor of each other at the constituency level, ruling out the possibility of a wide-scale contest. For this reason, it is not surprising that only three out of ten respondents (30 percent) said that the decisive part of the primary election for the Prime Minister candidate would be a real competition.
Hungarian society was less divided on whether Gergely Karácsony, who is running in the primary election for prime minister, would like to see him in the position of prime minister. Only 13 percent of those polled (1 million people) would like the current mayor of Budapest to be the head of the cabinet, but 67 percent of them - 5.4 million Hungarian voters - would not like to see him in this position.
Source and featured image: mandiner.hu