Both Péter Jakab and Bence Tordai unsuccessfully tried to provoke the Prime Minister during the immediate question hour, where the Prime Minister also made announcements: pensions will increase by five percent next year, teachers' salaries by ten percent, and after that they plan to repeat the staggered, fifty percent wage increase in the sector.

Péter Jakab , the Jobbik president whose reputation has been battered lately, only jumped into the parliament for the immediate question hour, but as if he wanted to refute the news that his embarrassing scandals would force him to behave more solidly, he attacked the prime minister with his usual aggressiveness.

First of all, he mockingly congratulated him that he was "elected head of the mafia again" at the Fidesz reform congress, and noted that Viktor Orbán said "a lot of nonsense" at the congress . He then criticized the government's economic policy with unearned words.

"You saved me from inviting me to an intellectual competition, thank you," the prime minister began his answer.

He called the attention of the president of Jobbik, who joined the left, to the fact that "those with whom he sits took away the 13th month's pension, one month's salary, created unemployment above ten percent during the crisis, cut the family support system, and lured families into a foreign currency loan trap. We were the ones who rescued them. During the period of your allies, the minimum wage was HUF 73,000, now it is HUF 200,000," emphasized the Prime Minister.

James then called him "out of his mind" and asked "when did power take away his sanity". He received a warning for his disrespect, and Orbán stated: "The left-wing bloc wants to eliminate utility reduction, and wants to raise the price of gas and electricity. Your program is a program of price increases, but "unfortunately" you cannot sit here," said the prime minister.

The socialist Tamás Harangozó claimed that the death rate due to the epidemic is the highest in our country (although Bence Rétvári had already denied this several times before the agenda - ed.), and he complained that expired PCR tests had to be destroyed.

Viktor Orbán stated that the test does not help, only the vaccination. By the way, "it is impossible to manage inventory in such a way that nothing has to be destroyed, but the point is to have enough of everything.

And in our country, everyone gets everything: hospital beds, ventilators, vaccinations and tests. Regarding the death data, he reacted as follows: "I think you know that you are stating an untruth, since it has already been brought up several times, and it is clear that if we look at the statistics using the same method, then Hungary has nothing to be ashamed of." More people could die due to treatment deficiencies than elsewhere, but this would mean that the doctors and nurses work worse here, but this is not true, they do their work excellently, "contrary to your suspicions", explained the prime minister.

Harangozó's fellow party member, László Szakács, spoke about how "inflation is sky high, the price is terrible, you have put the HUF on two shoulders" and that "there is no flickering light at the end of the tunnel".

The prime minister pointed out that inflation is high throughout Europe, even in the United States. "But then why do you want to abolish the overhead reduction?" he raised.

He said: then people would pay tens of thousands of forints more per month. The left, on the other hand, suggests "let's get into a smaller car, wash less, heat less". "We are not passively watching what is happening, there is a reduction in utilities, we have maximized the price of fuel, we are raising wages, and we are restoring what you destroyed, the 13th monthly pension".

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Photo: MH/Tamás Purger