While 66 percent of active voters in October said they expected the victory of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán in next year's parliamentary election, 69 percent in November said they expected the victory of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán in next year's parliamentary election, according to the latest poll by the Center for Fundamental Rights, the details of which were published on Facebook on Saturday.

They wrote that October 11-12. and November 15-17. Between 1,000 and 1,000 people were polled by telephone, it was revealed that " Péter Márki-Zay, who is running against the Prime Minister and enjoys the support of left-wing parties, and who previously called utility reduction stupidity ", had a reduced chance of winning: from 17 to 16 percent.

According to them, all this proves that Péter Márki-Zay was unable to increase the size of the critical camp with the government.

They added that, based on the November data, more than two-thirds of the respondents who promised to participate in the election, seven out of ten respondents (69 percent) consider the current prime minister the most likely to form the new cabinet.

" The assessment of Viktor Orbán's chances of victory has therefore improved in the past month: Péter Márki-Zay became the leader of the six-party left-liberal coalition in vain, but with his selection, the proportion of voters predicting the renewal of the incumbent prime minister's mandate increased from 66 to 69 percent," they said in the analysis .

Péter Márki-Zay's first place, on the other hand, is expected by fewer, instead of 17, only 16 percent of respondents expect it. In addition, the mayor of Hódmezővásárhely does not lead among voters who are critical of the government either: according to the data of the November survey, 38 percent of them expect Márki-Zay to win, and 41 percent expect Viktor Orbán to win, they wrote.

" This means that even the left-wing voters who do not sympathize with the government parties do not consider Péter Márki-Zay as a politician capable of defeating Viktor Orbán, " states the survey of the Center for Fundamental Rights.

MTI

Cover image: Center for Fundamental Rights