Funny, eh?! This is particularly suitable for depriving a country of money due to it. We are two weeks away from the elections, when Klára Dobrev, the EP representative of the DK, felt the absolute need to emphasize in ATV how much she does not support the Hungarians. On the other hand, how much he cares about the interests of Brussels when he wants to temporarily withdraw the funds of the Union's Cohesion Fund and Recovery Fund from Hungary.

Obviously, this austerity would harm Viktor Orbán's governance opportunities and make people even more angry with the prime minister. According to Dobrev, he is a bad person, he steals, cheats, and says all the bad things about him that come out at our elbows, for which they have not been able to show a single proof. The austerity is interesting in itself, because Brussels withholds from Hungary what it is entitled to, for which the country has paid compensation. Moreover, referring to a rule of law deficit that no one has yet been able to specifically define. That is why the Gyurcsányist left can make politics out of it, and they smear their own country in the European Parliament by spreading such defamatory information, which has no basis and no evidence.

Compared to this, the good news came from Bloomberg that it is unlikely that the EU will be in a hurry to introduce financial sanctions against Hungary and Poland due to the rule of law procedures, since only the latter has received one and a half million refugees due to Russian aggression, and the member states have to deal with the with rising energy prices and other price increases due to the war in Ukraine. Citing anonymous sources, the article states that one of the reasons for caution is that the European Court of Justice recently gave the green light to withdrawals,

but in order to start the mechanism, the Commission must provide rock-solid evidence that the Member States used EU funds inappropriately.

If anyone, from the government's side, Gergely Gulyás, the minister in charge of the Prime Minister's Office, knows what he's up to, and he's not an opposition politician who says what he wants without any kind of responsibility, but in full ownership of his responsibility, he recently said,

the procedure against Hungary has no basis, and the government does not expect it to start.

This news was a huge slap in the face for the Gyurcsányists, because a significant part of their campaign was based on withdrawing money from this government. After all, if they come to power, everything will change. That's why Klára Dobrev didn't let Bloomberg's good news spread. He ran into the ATV, where he stated: "It is very important to clarify, because the EU does not release the cohesion funds, just as Hungary does not receive funds from the Recovery Fund because of the Hungarian government. Pursuant to the Union's decision, it frees up the resources necessary to provide for the millions of refugees arriving from Ukraine in a fair manner. So it provides resources within the framework of the cohesion policy, but it only opens up a small slice of it."

The grapes are sour, dear Ms. Klára! At least Bloomberg cited anonymous sources, but you didn't even try. This idea, which can be classified as another campaign idea, simply popped out of his head to incite the Hungarians against Orbán for their own electoral success.

Dear Ms. Klára! Your ATV statement can be compared to schadenfreude, which is the joy that comes from other people's misfortune. In this case, the other people are the Hungarians whom you want to govern, and whom your husband and his comrades have already deceived so many times, they wanted to harm them, that there is too much to say.

That is why it would be worthwhile to wait for April 3rd with these seemingly completely unfounded bad news that you spread about Hungary, because then it will become clear exactly how much of their reality is. That maybe you will be the ones who give the Hungarians a reason to rejoice.

Source and full article: 888.hu

Featured Image: YouTube ATV/Illustration