After the European Union, Viktor Orbán and the conservative policy represented by the Hungarian Prime Minister are also starting to be seen as a point of reference in the United States.
This is proven not only by the fact that Donald Trump, who has always been the strongest person in the Republican Party, assured the Hungarian Prime Minister of his support ahead of everyone else, but also by the fact that the former American president "hit the mark" with his statement: although contextualized according to their own argument, all authoritative American left-liberals medium felt the need to comment on Trump's statement.
Donald Trump provided the left-liberal representatives and opinion makers of American public life with enough topics for the whole week by expressing his "full extent" support for the re-election of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. In his statement on Monday, the former US president said: the Hungarian prime minister loves his country from the bottom of his heart and wants security for his people
- and this was more than enough for Trump's message, made public through his Save America campaign organization - in the absence of his own Twitter account - to be viewed by all major American media outlets - contextualized according to the taste of the left-liberal mainstream. The New York Times, for example, noted : New elections await Orbán this spring, where he can measure himself against the "formally united but extremely diverse opposition parties". The authors of the liberal paper (one of whom, incidentally, is a former journalist of the portal 444.hu) added:
"The Hungarian Prime Minister has become a model of identity and religious politics, not only in Poland, which is considered his main ally within the European Union, but also in the United States."
This statement is also supported by the argument of , which did not fail to remind its readers that the well-known Fox News host Tucker Carlson participated in the MCC Fest last August at the invitation of the Mathias Corvinus Collegium, and during the days he was in Hungary, he broadcast a prime-time show from Budapest. game. The liberal paper added as an explanation: despite Orbán's undermining of democratic institutions, prominent far-right figures in the United States stood by his leadership.
the rest here in Magyar Nemzet.
Image: AP