Well, no. It really doesn't matter who can decide the fate of the homeland. But can the repeated introduction of the literacy test help to revive Jobbik, which has crumbled into invisibility?

Jobbik shared a not so unexpected video on its TikTok channel. In the short recording, Brenner Koloman, the party's parliamentary representative, firmly states that one of the latest (???) proposals of the opposition party is to

the citizen who does not have the eight basic grades should not be able to vote on the future of our country".

Brenner went on to say that those who are "in possession of their mental faculties" can vote.

"In the age of threats, it does not matter who decides on such very serious issues, which is why we think this proposal is very, very important"

- emphasized the politician.

43 percent of Hungarians agreed that the right to vote should be linked to a basic education, according to the research conducted by the IDEA Institute in November 2017, according to which 26 percent fully and 17 percent partially agreed with the idea that Dóra Dúró, a representative from Jobbik, put forward in August 2017 described, saying that a literacy census should be introduced.

In IDEA's survey, 54 percent of Jobbik voters completely agreed with the idea, and another 12 percent rather agreed with it, and 43 percent of government party voters agreed with the proposal.

In the camp of the left-wing opposition parties, however, less than a third supported the restriction of the right to vote: the Együtt and Párbeszéd camp mostly rejected the idea (62 percent did not agree with it at all, 13 percent rather disagreed with it), and the MSZP (59 percent did not at all, 14 percent would rather not).

Like Jobbik, their support has now become invisible to the naked eye.

You can see the relevant post below:

@jobbik_mm @dr.brenner.koloman ♬ original sound – jobbik_mm – jobbik_mm