The amendment of the kata has no effect on party preference: the support of the governing parties is stable, while the opposition parties are still in crisis, according to the latest party preference research by the Nézőpont Institute. The absolute majority of Hungarians are still behind Fidesz-KDNP with 54 percent, while four of the six left-wing parties in the parliament would not enter the parliament independently.

Fidesz-KDNP is supported by 54 percent of Hungarian voters, the absolute majority, according to the new party preference research of the Nézőpont Institute. According to the institute, stable social support was also reflected in the results of several by-elections held since the election.

Nézőpont's survey of a thousand people over the phone, representative of the population over 18 years of age according to gender, age, region, type of settlement and education, reveals that only four opposition parties, the Democratic Coalition (DK), Momentum, Mi Hazánk Mozgalom, and the The Hungarian Kétfarkú Kutya Party (MKKP) just reaches the five percent required to enter the parliament.

Based on this, only the biggest winner of the electoral alliance, DK and Momentum, would enter the parliament among the parliamentary parties of the left. But neither the Gyurcsány party, the only one with a stable leadership, nor Momentum, which changed the president and faction leader, could gain momentum since the election. Mi Hazánk, which is getting in at the expense of MKKP and Jobbik, maintains the support it needs to get in.

The full article of Magyar Nemzet can be read here.

Picture: Róbert Hegedűs