On Wednesday, Brussels forced through another pro-migration legislative step: the EU permanent representatives' committee discussed the final text of the last element of the migration pact, the so-called crisis decree, wrote Bence Rétvári in his Facebook post.

The Parliamentary State Secretary of the Ministry of the Interior commented on the news that the ambassadors of the European Union member states reached an agreement on the last element of the new common European asylum and migration policy, their negotiating mandate for the decree on crisis situations, which also includes defining the use of migration as a tool.

The new legislation creates the framework under which member states in a migration crisis can request solidarity contributions from other EU countries, which includes the possibility of resettling migrants to other member states.

Bence Rétvári pointed out in his post: the draft text was distributed to the participants five minutes before the vote, and the debate on an issue that could decide the fate of Europe and turn the member states into a nation of immigrants lasted only thirteen minutes.

"Hungary and Poland voted no on the draft regulation, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Austria abstained, but our vote did not count in Brussels, they will continue this dangerous draft regulation with a qualified majority decision," wrote Rétvári, highlighting:

Brussels wants absolute power over when, where and how many migrants it resettles.

In addition to the mandatory migrant quotas, this proposal would distribute illegal immigrants among the EU countries according to new quotas, if they suddenly appeared in large numbers in a member state, explained the state secretary, who also emphasized:

Brussels is abusing its power when it passes its pro-migration proposals by force, bypassing the principled mandatory consensus decision-making.

In 2015, the decision was made in favor of a faulty migration policy, millions of migrants were allowed in unchecked, and many countries are now feeling the consequences. Now, instead of changing its position, the EU continues to push for the mandatory resettlement of migrants - reminded Rétvári, who, according to

this regulation does not stop migration, but rather frees illegal migrants to the member states.

The Hungarian government - asserting the will of the Hungarian people - consistently rejects the mandatory distribution of migrants and the creation of migrant ghettos - stressed Bence Rétvári on his social media page.