Péter Márki-Zay wants to take advantage of the changing mood of the opposition to knock Ferenc Gyurcsány out of the saddle, and the American, globalist press is seconding him - Zoltán Kiszelly told our paper that the failed prime minister candidate of the left has rudely attacked the president of the DK in the past few days. According to the director of the Századvég Center for Political Analysis, however, the mayor of Hódmezővásárhely, who is currently without a party, is unlikely to achieve his goal, while Gyurcsány, who has been vocal about preparations, cements himself as the leader of the left.
The propaganda of the Free Europe and 444.hu, i.e. the American, globalist press, explains the actions of Péter Márki-Zay. These bodies are now attacking the left-wing opposition by not taking advantage of the dissatisfaction due to the amendment of the kata and the reduction of utilities, and they are doing this at the request of the government. With the help of this propaganda
Márki-Zay is trying to change the opposition again, and his number one target is Ferenc Gyurcsány - Zoltán Kiszelly told our newspaper about the fact that the mayor of Hódmezővásárhely recently attacked the president of the DK, with whom he ran for the election together in April.
During the parliamentary election campaign, they found that Ferenc Gyurcsány did not actually want to replace the government.
Known: Péter Márki-Zay announced over the weekend that the Everyone's Hungary Movement (MMM), which he leads, will no longer support DK candidates in the by-elections, because the party "several times targeted opposition candidates, dividing the opposition votes." Moreover, according to MMM, Ferenc Gyurcsány did not actually want to replace the government in April, and moreover, a person whose "policemen without identification numbers kick and beat harmless people lying on the ground during his time in power is a discredited alternative."
We are creating an authentic alternative - insisted Péter Márki-Zay, while turning against his former ally. - We are happy to talk to the mayor of Hódmezővásárhely about the affairs of Hódmezővásárhely, but only about that, because his previous national political involvement and speeches led to the largest two-thirds of Fidesz of all time - responded the DK.
The left will never win with Ferenc Gyurcsány, so if he is not kicked out of the saddle now, then in the next four years it will be the same as it was before: they can neither spit him out nor swallow him
- said the director of the Századvég Political Analysis Center. He emphasized: it is no coincidence that, meanwhile, Ferenc Gyurcsány also started the "we are getting ready" campaign, the details of which, although not much is known for now, it is certain: the goal of the DK president is to cement and even further strengthen his power on the left.
Gyurcsány wants to address the Jobbik orphans, the uncertain opposition, he is trying to offer them some possibility of action, in order to raise his party, which currently stands at five to six percent, to seven to eight to nine percent for the watershed EP elections in 2024, said Zoltán Kiszelly , who, at our suggestion, believed that
Even with the help of the globalist press, Péter Márki-Zay cannot change the opposition or knock Gyurcsány out of the saddle.
Hungarian politics is parliament-centered, i.e. people basically know the parliamentary parties and expect them to shape politics. Without a party, but especially without a parliamentary party, Péter Márki-Zay will not be able to overthrow the power of the current opposition - said the political scientist, who says that the mayor of Hódmezővásárhely may succeed in establishing his own party by 2024 at the latest, but Gyurcsány will also strengthen himself by then.
And the aim of the globalist press is to overthrow the Hungarian government, which is open to Russia and China, so that it can even buy piped Russian oil and gas instead of the extremely expensive American LNG, Zoltán Kiszelly summed up for Magyar Nemzet.
Source: Hungarian Nation
Featured image: Source: Attila Kisbenedek/AFP