Just the usual: in his human dignity, the vice-president of the Tisza party, whose votes he wants to win, humiliated millions of voters. Interesting concept…

Magyar Nemzet's report, Péter Magyar called the Fidesz people an endangered species in a street forum.

The politician said this at the Tiszaföldvár forum, where he stated at one point in his speech:

Nowadays, being a cheesy Fidesz is a dying breed.

Meanwhile, Ferenc Gyurcsány, the president of the Democratic Coalition (DK), told Péter Magyar the other day: "You are not an opponent of Fidesz, but Fidesz itself."

Péter Magyar has made scandalous statements before, and threats are not far from him. He also said earlier that on June 8, there will be no peaceful people in Hősök Square, that crowd will not be able to be stopped.

But not only Péter Magyar, but also his colleagues are famous for personal and threatening statements. One of Magyar's important background figures, who helps organize events, demonstrations and street forums as the party's "operational officer", is Márk Radnai, the son of Jobbik's former communications director, László Radnai. In 2015, for example, film director Márk Radnai harshly threatened the theater critic Tamás Koltai, who had allegedly criticized Radnai's work several times:

"Hi Thomas! Someone once told you that you are a pest cockroach. Why do you think? If I see you near any of my shows again, I will break all your fingers one by one.

No doubt. Have a nice summer! Go far!”

Kinga Kollár, one of the candidates for the European Parliament of the Tisza party, did not hold back when he called the Hungarians a brainwashed people in a Facebook post in 2022. The insulting and insulting statements were not far from Péter Márky-Zay, who dared to

he compared government sympathizers to mushrooms fed with manure and kept in the dark, but it was also said that they were stupid and aberrant.

The mayor of Hódmezővásárhely made statements deeply insulting to rural people, for example, he claimed that if Fidesz gathered its best people in a rural town, they probably wouldn't be able to solve a crossword puzzle.

Featured image: Nagy Bogi/Index