95 percent of the respondents condemn the fact that the left did not vote for the Fidesz-KDNP pro-peace resolution proposal in the Parliament. The motion adopted at the end of March - submitted by the governing parties in connection with the one-year anniversary of the outbreak of the Russian-Ukrainian war - urges peace as soon as possible and warns the states against any steps that threaten the expansion of the war.
Optimusz Direkt Marketing Kft., which created the survey, asked the following question:
do they agree with the fact that the left did not vote for the pro-peace declaration submitted by the governing parties in the Parliament.
The question made it clear that whoever rejects the approach of the left supports peace.
The public opinion survey commissioned by Mediaworks produced a very clear result:
95 percent of those who form an opinion want peace, that is, they do not agree with the position of the left rejecting the pro-peace proposal.
The opposition attitude won the approval of only five percent of the respondents.
The survey was conducted by phone calls by Optimusz, in the past few days, between April 6 and 18. The company called almost half a million people, of whom 81,000 answered the question.
The background to this research is that the Fidesz-KDNP faction alliance submitted a pro-peace resolution proposal to the Parliament on the anniversary of the war in Ukraine. The motion was adopted by the parliament on March 31 with the votes of the representatives of the government party.
The left wing led by Ferenc Gyurcsány rejected the pro-peace resolution. The vast majority of the DK faction, as well as representatives of the MSZP, LMP and Jobbik did not participate in the vote. Momentum and Párbeszéd voted against the proposal, similarly to DK's Ferenc Dávid and the independent Ákos Hadházy. In addition to the left, the Mi Hazánk faction also did not support the pro-peace resolution.
The document points out that the war between Russia and Ukraine has been going on for a year and shows no signs of ending any time soon.
The full article of Magyar Nemzet can be read here.
Image: Center for Fundamental Rights