According to the paper, Viktor Orbán "protects his Gallic village", i.e. Hungary, from all freedom restrictions threatened by the evil "Romans" in Brussels.

On Tuesday, Viktor Orbán took part in an open panel discussion in Germany organized by the center-right political and cultural monthly Cicero and the Berliner Zeitung. In connection with the conversation, Die Tagespost published an article entitled "Viktor Orbán, the Hungarian Asterix". In the article, the paper's author had a particularly good opinion of the Hungarian Prime Minister.

He explained, "the Hungarian Prime Minister revealed his political priority in Berlin with ruthless honesty:

for him, Hungary is the first.

By doing so, he will certainly disappoint his enemies and his friends in Germany."

The author lived with an interesting parallel: Viktor Orbán is the Hungarian Asterix. "He protects his Gallic village, i.e. Hungary, from all freedom restrictions threatened by the evil "Romans" in Brussels," writes the author. According to him, the Hungarian Prime Minister's "magic power is the pronounced Hungarian sense of freedom - or as Viktor Orbán himself put it: this sense of freedom is the essence of his country's national identity. He wants his children to be able to say that their parents' generation fought and defended this Hungarian freedom".

In its report on the conversation, the paper noted that the Hungarian prime minister disappointed both his passionate critics and enthusiastic fans: "it turned out that he is not the grandfather of European right-wing populists, who wants to shape the continent politically in his favor, and neither are the Christian-Western forces his commander, who is waiting to go into battle in the pan-European culture war. Viktor Orbán rather states that when he fights against genderism and multiculturalism,

then he does it primarily for Hungary."

When asked about his friendship with Putin, he explained: he is not interested in Putin at all, he is interested in Hungary.

Source: mandiner.hu

Featured image: MTI/Zoltán Fischer