Péter Márki-Zay already admitted on Friday evening that he had consulted with Gordon Bajnai in London, saying that he was particularly happy that they could discuss the most important challenges facing the country. He also left no doubt that he considers Bajnai's advice to be followed, once again praising his "performance", as before, when he spoke highly of the austerity measures taken by the former prime minister during the crisis.

In another post, he indicated that he would return the University of Theater and Film Arts to the former students and teachers, with the motto "free country, free university" - the question is what he would do with the current students and teachers...

He later expressed his solidarity with the teachers who were preparing to go on strike. "We support the teachers in their protest, who are forced to go on strike for what should be going on by default, and who are even threatened with lawsuits by the government," said the candidate for prime minister of the left. As we have already pointed out, they are trying to create an all-left campaign out of sectoral demands, there is little mention of specific trade union demands, rather they try to involve parents and children by voicing generalities.

The participants are asked to make banners and wear blue ribbons – while the blue ribbon is the trademark of Márki-Zay and his followers – but they have not even agreed on sufficient services, even though this is a condition for a legal strike. It is not known what Márki-Zay had in mind when he wrote about the fact that teachers are forced to strike for something they are entitled to by default, but at the top of the trade union's demands is the withdrawal of the decree on the mandatory vaccination of teachers, and the level of wage demands after the government announced this year's , a ten percent increase, changed to 45 percent.

What the opposition prime minister candidate did not report on Saturday was the handshake with Csaba Czeglédy, the lawyer of the Gyurcsánys who is currently under criminal proceedings.

This was done by the other two protagonists of the meeting, Czeglédy and András Nemény, the mayor of Szombathely with all-left support, who proudly announced after the pre-election charade that Czeglédy would be the joint candidate. After the weekend visit, Nemény boasted that Márki-Zay had promised to give Szombathely "compensation due to government deductions" in the event of their victory.

Right from the start, the left-wing municipalities have criticized the tax relief given to entrepreneurs during the epidemic as "bleeding", meaning that half of the local business tax did not have to be paid, and now they have made it a campaign issue in many places, including Szombathely. However, when PestiSracok.hu inquired whether the companies of the mayor and the deputy mayors took advantage of the relief, or whether they actually paid the full tax, helping the city as local patriots, they did not receive an answer. The portal knows about the mayor: he owns two companies, real estate developer Ynos Kft. and Nemény Szolgáltató Bt., which is a news service company, and for years he has not fulfilled his obligation to upload accounting reports.

Source: Magyar Hírlap

Picture: MTI