With this, European citizens were also ranked. Written by Zoltán Veczán.

Cordon sanitaire, i.e. sanitary cordon. The term is associated with the name of the French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, whom we also know too well, and although in 1919 it concealed the intention of isolating Bolshevizing Russia and encircling the always suspicious Germans, today it is used quite naturally when grotesque coalitions, political maneuvers and sometimes forceful methods are used. they cross the boundaries of law, ethics and sometimes common sense,

just to stop the greatest evil, the "far right".

The quotation mark is justified: recently, the attributes of the extreme right were such as racism, anti-Semitism or rejection of the democratic system. But since the mainstream Western ideology, which calls itself democratic, has been decolonizing - in other words: de-whitening - public life, culture and education on the basis of race; condones the anti-Semitic rants of Muslim immigrants or the hordes that support Hamas; and bans and punishes certain opinions,

the label "far-right" is no longer a substantive criticism.

It is only good for expressing the distaste for the mentioned mainstream, if you have run out of arguments, and to justify the establishment of the "health cordon". Either by banning newspapers, or by boycotting the Hungarian presidency, or by

when allocating posts, it totally neglects the Patriots for Europe and Europe of Sovereign Nations (ESN) factions in the European Parliament.

"You should also vote, don't let others decide for you! Every vote counts!” - said Roberta Metsola, the president of the EP, in a video message in the organization's information campaign back in April. And the people voted, because the parliament is the only directly elected substantive body of the European Union, where the will of the people can still be expressed to some extent.

Not so much, or at least not all of us.

It is understandable to the extent that "the winner is rewarded" - although in this regard, the criticisms against the Hungarian electoral system can also be forgotten -:

the European People's Party (EPP), for which approximately one in four, a total of 41.5 million European citizens voted, and thus obtained a quarter of the mandates, presides with its politicians over the European Commission and the EP, i.e., the two top institutions in addition to the European Council. In addition, he holds 3 of the 13 EP vice-presidents, 2 of the 5 quaestor positions, he also chairs 8 EP committees, and he also has 33 vice-presidents in these policy-making sub-bodies. It is easy to calculate: the major mainstream parties – the EPP, the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) and the liberal Renew Europe! (Renew) –

they got one EP vice-president's seat for every five to six million votes, and one EP committee position for about one million votes.

The smaller ones, i.e. the Greens-European Free Alliance and the Left, which is half the size of the Patriots, were also paid with one EP vice-president and one EP committee post, even if not proportionately. Meloni's European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR), pushed outside the cordon, were finally forced to let them in - this is how they became "far-right" in Politico, i.e. in Brussels Pravda, sometimes "hard-right" - and they were assigned just as many positions as to the renewers who won more than one and a half million votes less than them.

18.2 million people voted for the Patriots - and the number of positions they received was zero.

None of the EP vice-presidents, quaestors, committee presidents, or vice-presidents could be patriotic representatives. ESN, which received 7.5 million votes, also received nothing.

With this, European citizens were also ranked.

We calculated: in terms of votes per position, the vote of the liberal Renew voter is the most valuable, followed by the voter of the EPP, then the voter of the other factions within the cordon; and finally, that of the more than 25 million patriots and sovereignists whose vote is de facto worth nothing - they can shout from outside the cordon, but they are essentially disenfranchised in Europe. Perhaps not only Doctor Clemenceau clicked with satisfaction, but also his favorite patron, Edvard Beneš.

Mandarin

Featured image: cdn-newsapi.com.au