It is time for us, nationalists and conservatives, to ask the basic question: is it good that the Orbán government has no opposition? Because there is no doubt that the opposition parties cannot be taken too seriously after their brutal election defeat in 2022. Apparently, they could not process their defeat (now the fourth in a row, and humiliating as well), they are in a state of continuous frustration and depression. In addition, there was Péter Márki-Zay's funny, but very terrifying in its content, rant about the fact that the money for the campaign was received from abroad and continues to be received to this day, and this was probably not the case only in this campaign.

As a result, not only are they unable to process their defeats and are unable to get up from the floor, but also the illegality and violation of election laws hangs over them like the sword of Damocles. Of course, they pretend to exist, they make statements about each other, sometimes they march in groups of five or six or demonstrate ineffectively, but in reality everyone feels that the weight of this is equal to zero in today's political balance of power, which shows the brutal superiority of Fidesz-KDNP.

If we examine the deeper reasons for this, Ervin Nagy may be right, who said in a recent statement to our newspaper: "Only the complete renewal of the opposition can create a clean situation. Without a change of opposition, the left will never regain its credibility."

But in order to not only quote a nationally oriented analyst, it is also worth paying attention to the comments of a (former?) left-wing politician, who reaches similar conclusions to Ervin Nagy.

He is none other than Szabolcs Kerék-Bárczy, who started his career in the MDF, but in the early 2010s he became an adviser to the then EP representative Lajos Bokros, then joined the DK in 2013, and until 2016 he was involved in politics there, and in 2014 he was also an individual representative candidate in the colors of the party. However, in 2016, a Paradigm shift! wrote a memorandum with the title, as a result of which he had to leave Gyurcsány's company, which was so open to critical voices.

Well, Kerék-Bárczy recently wrote about the situation of the opposition in Hvg.hu: "This company (meaning the current left-liberal opposition - FT) must be forgotten, they must not be discussed in the same way as the hard core of the NER. They are the problem itself, neither together nor broken down into their organizations or individuals, they are not the solution, but the towering obstacle to be overcome before the rebuilding of liberal democracy, the rule of law and social solidarity.

A democratic future cannot be built on them in the same way as it was not possible for the Patriotic People's Front before the regime change. So it is not a change of opposition that is needed, but an opposition, because it has not been there for a long time. Research shows that NER does not have absolute majority support in society. So there would be a need for change, an opposition would be needed."

Apart from the obvious bias of his last sentence, what he claims about the left-wing opposition is consistent with what Ervin Nagy also says. To this we can add the recent longer analysis of the excellent thinker Márton Békés on the XXI. On the website of the Század Intézet, in which he explains that today's left-wing opposition is essentially bought and controlled by the pound, it is held under the power of the global-progressive international network. Békés explains in detail the individual "stations" of this process, which began in the early 2010s and was almost completed by 2022, but I would not go into them here and now, only the end result, which essentially means the same thing that Nagy and Kerék-Bárczy also speak: the left-wing opposition has been liquidated.

After all, an opposition that quite simply sells its soul to foreign, American, democratic, but above all globalist circles, including, of course, Uncle Soros, can no longer be considered a national opposition - but a Hungarian agency of foreign networks.

And this is another area where the secret services have much more to do than the analysts. We still remember Béla Kun's Hungarian Party of Communists from the previous century, which even in its name proudly declared that they did not operate as a Hungarian party, but as the Hungarian repository of the international communist movement (and even then: network), or if you like, its "cell ". If we look at today's DK, MSZP, Párbeszéd and the others, and especially if we look at them together - because that's the only way it's worthwhile - then we can also come to this conclusion. The current left-wing opposition is one of the peaks of the international globalist-progressive network, which is connected by important edges to the "nodes" that play a central role.

But if this is so, then what Nagy, Békés and Kerék-Bárczy are saying resonates: a real Hungarian, left-wing, left-liberal opposition operating on a national basis has ceased to exist in Hungary. Instead, this conglomerate is led by agents who are true globalists, so much so that several of them do not even live in Hungary - we can mention by name perhaps the two most important people from this circle, Gordon Bajnai and Dávid Korányi.

And here we can return to the big question: is this situation good for us, nationalists, conservatives and Christians?

Obviously, at first, we can jump at it without thinking: yes, it's great! What's more, it's excellent! Our power and victory in the national elections are guaranteed for twenty to thirty years, as the Hungarian public clearly recognized that the leadership of not only a country, but even a village should not be given to this "opposition". (Respect to the few exceptions.) Even if our political community occasionally sees errors and mistakes in the work of the current government - which is completely natural, since no perfect government has ever been invented anywhere - but these errors and mistakes are the they do not in the least provide a basis for a change of government, because the Hungarian electorate could not commit a greater irresponsibility than handing over the right of leadership to a non-Hungarian, but internationally embedded, left-wing opposition. (The final point in this regard was some of Márki-Zay's amazing expressions towards the end of last year's campaign, when the war had already broken out, and he would have offered the blood of Hungarian youth fighting on the side of the Ukrainians...)

So, under the current circumstances, political exchange management cannot and should not be operated in Hungary, because that would be a betrayal of national interests.

However, it is true in principle that the presence of a national, democratic, constructive opposition is always important in a democracy.

Because every government can be spurred on to better performance if it receives or can receive strong, well-founded and credible criticism when it is needed. This is not to be expected from this opposition, if only because it is not credible - if it criticizes something, the government will prove in an instant that when it was in power in the 2000s, it did the exact opposite of what it is proposing now. And the government cannot rightfully accept criticism from a discredited party.

So, should the national-conservative, sovereignist side do anything in this political situation?

I have a proposal in this regard: where this left-liberal opposition - parties and politicians - have committed illegalities, or more specifically, there is a thorough suspicion of such, the investigations must be carried out consistently and with a ruthless desire to seek the truth and the necessary judgments must be made.

This applies to cases related to real estate Panamas in the capital, it applies to suspected violations of the law related to rolling dollars or even to the multiple cases of László Varju, not least to each and every suspicious transaction of Ferenc Gyurcsány, and we could go on and on. I don't want to go into that now - because I have already written several times - that Gyurcsány is a total dead end for the opposition.

All of this is important because a non-existent opposition, which is really only held together by the smell of money, and laws are not sacred to them, should not be spared. Public life must be cleaned up in order to pave the way for a democracy where the nation and the common good, as well as the truth, prevail - both in the government and in the opposition.

Source: Hungarian Nation

Cover photo: András Fekete-Győr, the failed president of Momentum, Péter Jakab, the failed president of Jobbik, Péter Márki-Zay, the failed prime ministerial candidate of the left, Mayor Gergely Karácsony and shadow prime minister Klára Dobrev (Photo: MTI/Zsolt Szigetváry)