Lawyer-writer Tamás Kötter, Megafon's political opinion leader, evaluated yesterday's Gyurcsány annual review on his Facebook page
"We are over Ferenc Gyurcsány's annual evaluation. It is difficult to remain calm, as memories from the years before 2010 are still vivid. I remember exactly when the same incompetent gang pushed the country into the abyss culturally, economically and politically in the same superior, knowledgable style.
But what did we see?! The annual assessor broadcasted both visually and rhetorically that "the boss has arrived!" atmosphere. Gyurcsány tried to paint large arcs and set directions for the left. This made it clear that he is the leader on the left, not only in my opinion, but clearly in their opinion as well. In terms of content, it was meaningless. Gyurcsány is a skilled power technician, which is why he was able to dominate the left, but his social vision did not exist 20 years ago and, as we have seen, does not exist now. He tried to make his point that one has to choose between the West or the East, in which he obviously represents the West, but that is not the case.
The Hungarian government is not looking for a point of alignment abroad. The Hungarian government's point of alignment is the Hungarian interest, and it determines our domestic and foreign policy. So the stake now is not the choice between the West and the East, as this was already decided by Saint István 1000 years ago. The real stake of the elections is whether our country will have a sovereign, national government in the next 4 years, which works for the Hungarian people and Hungarian families, or the Gyurcsánys will climb back into power on the back of Márki-Zay and hand over our country to the rainbow lobby with wide tongue strikes, open our borders to immigrants before and they spread our common goods just as they did before 2010 or nowadays at the City Hall.
Let's defend our achievements so far, for which we have worked hard! There is no more chance for the left! Go Hungary! Come on, strong Europe!"
Photo: Dániel Deák, Facebook