"I'm also a radical because I don't believe in aid or even equal opportunities. This equality certainly sounds nice, but let's understand that it will never be the case that everyone is equal," once stated Zoltán Kész, who is now the aide to the left-wing Prime Minister candidate Péter Márki-Zay.

Márki-Zay's gun bearer does not believe in equal opportunities!

The leader of the opposition not only considers the minimum wage unnecessary, he would also significantly rewrite the right to vote if he listened to his assistant.

In his now defunct blog, he made even more profound statements: "I don't believe in universal suffrage, because as long as the vote of the non-taxpayer matches that of the taxpayer, only demagoguery and populism dominate political culture or lack of culture." In the same place, he also wrote: "I would ban anyone who was in any political position before 1990 from politics. I wouldn't allow young people who don't even remotely know work to take on any kind of representation."

The video, which Péter Márki-Zay recently shared on his Facebook page, also shows his talent. In it, Márki-Zay announces that they are traveling to Warsaw with Kész, where they will meet several people, and then he expected help from Kész, and who, in fact, with whom. However, the addressee, who seemed a bit dazed, began to falter. "Well, first of all, we will meet today Simon... aaa... mmm... suddenly I wanted to say... With holovnya..." he finally blurted out.

However, the great organizer Kész quickly overcame the interruption and started a rousing speech. The essence of this was that the Poles will see that the serious politicians are on the left, not like "the Putin mercenary Salvini and the Putin mercenary Orbán".

Márki-Zay's enthusiastic gun bearer, Zoltán Kész, was a member of Fidesz for a short time in 2004, then in 2015 he started as an independent in Veszprém with the support of MSZP, DK, Együtt, PM, Hungarian Liberal Party, MoMa and Lokálpatriots in the interim election, which had to be called due to the appointment of Tibor Navracsics as EU Commissioner. He won this, but his career as a representative ended in 2018. Today, he is the vice-president responsible for rural areas of Márki-Zay's Everyone's Hungary Movement. If you were to look at your own political career - from the point of view of loyalty - you could easily say: Well, that's why I'm done!

In the past few days, they also wrote about Péter Márki-Zay's opinion about social benefits. "I'm very liberal in economic matters, I don't necessarily think the minimum wage is necessary either," he said.

Source: magyarhirlap.hu

Featured image: Hír TV