Source: MTI/Prime Minister's Press Office/Prime Minister's Press Office/Zoltán Fischer
According to the Austrian analysis, it is increasingly difficult for several governments in the EU to extend it until the end of the cycle. There has been no government crisis in Hungary since 2010, and the most stable government is with the four-thirds Fidesz-KDNP majority, reports Mandiner.
The Viennese analysis and consulting company Pantarhei recently prepared an analysis in which they measured how stable the government is in the EU member states.
The analysts ranked Hungary in first place - Euractiv reported the result.
In their analysis, they primarily took into account how many parties the government is made up of, as well as how many government crises there were in the last two parliamentary cycles in the given country.
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has the most stable government in Europe.
Stable two-thirds majority behind Fidesz-KDNP
According to Euractiv, it is therefore not surprising that Hungary came in first place, since the two-party coalition of Fidesz and KDNP has been in power since 2010, and in the elections of recent years they have won a two-thirds majority in the parliament, and there has been no government crisis since 2010, the experts pointed out.
Hungary is followed by Cyprus, Lithuania, Luxembourg and Germany in the list of stable governments. While Spain, Bulgaria and Italy were at the other end of the list. Because in these countries "a relatively weak government coalition consisting of many parties governs, and government crises have been typical in recent years," they explained.
Pantarhei's analysts see that in the current crisis situation, it is difficult for the governments throughout the European Union to extend it to the end of the cycle at all.
Euractiv cited the analysis.
The stability of the member states also affects EU decision-making.
In the analysis, it was also mentioned that the instability of the governments of the member countries also affects the decision-making of the entire EU, because it is becoming more and more difficult for the heads of state and government of the European Council to agree on various issues, and the member states block the steps initiated by the European Commission more often than before - emphasized in the article.
2022Plus: The name of the Austrian analytical institute probably comes from the ancient Asia Minor sage Herakleitos. His thought is panta rhei, meaning "everything flows". However, the water runs away, but the stone remains, says Albert Wass. There is a rock here in the middle of Europe, which for the time being resists the currents that today represent the leftist-globalist-gender-neutral politics of Brussels, so let your representatives be annoyed that this rock does not move even under the pressure of the rainbow-shining tide.
Like it or not, the stone remains!
Source: Origo.hu
Featured image: MTI