69 percent of Hungarians do not support Péter Márki-Zay's proposal to repeal the Child Protection Act, according to a recent poll by the Századvég Foundation. In view of the upcoming national referendum, the survey investigated what the politically active Hungarian population thinks about the statements of the left-wing prime minister's candidate regarding child protection.
69 percent of Hungarians do not support MiniFeri's proposal to repeal the Child Protection Act, according to a recent poll by Századvég
Almost two-thirds of Hungarian voters do not agree with Márki-Zay's criticism of the Basic Law.
At a public event held for university students, Péter Márki-Zay criticized Hungary's Basic Law and stated, "I consider it aberrant and downright arbitrary that they wrote that the father is a man and the mother is a woman." According to the research data, the majority of Hungarian voters do not agree with the statement of the left-liberal candidate for prime minister.
According to the survey, 64 percent of the respondents do not share Márki-Zay's opinion that it is an "aberration" or "stupidity" that the Basic Law stipulates that "the mother is a woman and the father is a man." In contrast, only 31 percent of them agree with the left-wing politician's position.
After the National Assembly ordered the referendum on child protection, the left-wing prime ministerial candidate explained that - if the left-liberal forces can form a government in the spring - "we will immediately cancel this terrible law".
At the same time, the research highlights that 69 percent of Hungarians oppose Péter Márki-Zay's proposal to repeal the Child Protection Act, while 21 percent would support this step.
Source: magyarhirlap.hu/Századvég
Featured image: hirado.hu